Monday, August 13, 2007

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Done!

Last fall we had a debate in Stager's class about what to do with students who proclaim they are done. Are we really ever done?

Well this is my final post for my Action Research Project. The final report can be read at http://students.pepperdine.edu/ccassine/arp.htm .

I have beginning my post OMET blog at http://www.edtechvision.org/. Come join me there.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Engagement and the Power of CHOICE

The learning strategy that I have used this last term has been giving students opportunities to choose various aspects of their assignments. I have found that when students get to choose between two different ways to demonstrate their understanding, for example, creating a podcast or writing a letter, the student embraces the project and claims ownership of their work. Just the simple act of choosing empowers students and makes them feel like they have some control over how to best represent their learning.

The final project for the term will embrace choice and focus on the process of learning. Students will select available software and locate classmates and resources to help in learning a new software tool. Students will decide what they want to learn, locate print and online resources for instruction, keep a daily journal of their discoveries, capture screen shots or take photos of their process, and then finally share what they learned in class.

There is a lot of flexibility in choosing what to learn and students may learn the software with other classmates but ultimately it is the responsibility of each student to follow through and create this learning adventure for themselves. The documentation along the way is to demonstrate their understanding of the chosen software. Each student will be expected to SHARE one thing they learned about their chosen software during a class presentation.

Students are choosing to:
  • build and program in Lego robotics
  • edit music with Audacity
  • create original music in Acid Music
  • edit video in Adobe Premiere Elements
  • create animated movies in Macromedia Flash
  • edit photographs in Adobe Photoshop Elements

I have been pleased with the interactions of students during class. Students are experimenting, looking at books for ideas, asking questions, and learning by lots of trial and error. Who knew learning could be so fun?

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Teaching skills with a purpose

This week I spent some time in direct instruction with my students on specific PowerPoint skills (Word outlines, slide master, action buttons, and animations). Teaching these skills without a real purpose for using them would have been a waste of time.

One of the things that I have come to realize during this research project is that there must be a real purposeful reason to learn the skills and then opportunities to use them. There are other skills in PowerPoint that I don't cover - such as how to convert a slideshow to a webpage. We aren't going to be posting them online and that's not really how most people use PowerPoint - so why teach it?

I am looking back at my former scope and sequence of skills and re-evaluating some of the skills I used to teach. Yes it is nice to learn how to do a pivot table in Excel, or hanging indents in Word or automatic slide advance in PowerPoint - but if there is no real reason to learn it and use it - how can I think that the students will ever really "learn" this skill and retain the information?

Wouldn't it be better to teach them how to learn than trying to cram "everything" they should know about using a piece of software - one that will eventually change anyway?

Thursday, May 24, 2007

PowerPoint slide master

Many students come to my class feeling "comfortable" with PowerPoint so my goal is to teach them some news skills to keep the focus on content or make formatting and animating quicker, easier and consistent.

One of the ways that I do this is to teach my students how to create their own original design template by using the slide master. The preformatted design templates are overused and not very interesting - plus they usually don't match the topic. I teach students how to go to View / Master / Slide Master and design a template from scratch. I encourage students to choose background colors, designs or images that match their topic.

For example, one of my students in presenting a PowerPoint all about surfing so she found a cool wave photograph that we lightened and place as the background of her slides. Then she chose complimentary colors and fonts for the titles and body paragraphs. She included a navigation bar on the left of the slide and a small image near the title. This slide was saved as a design template and then could be applied to the PowerPoint slides (the one that was written in Word).

The student is now more than half done since all the text and slide formatting is completed. The next steps include changing the slide layouts, transitions and adding images/sounds/movies.

Animations for titles and body paragraphs can be added to the slide master as well as "actions" to link the navigation bar to individual slides.

I asked students to give opinions about the use of the slide master:
  • It makes it easier to format all the slides at once.
  • You can match your design to your topic.
  • It makes the show more professional looking - but I still like change some of the background designs for some slides.
  • I probably won't go search for design templates online anymore - I'll just make my own.
  • I used to spend a lot of time animating all of the text. Completing the animations in the slide master saves TONS of time.
  • I like using the slide master and Word outline together - it's so much easier.
  • I never knew that you could add action buttons or hyperlinks in PowerPoint to make the projects more interactive.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

The "cool" factor of PowerPoint

Students always seem to get excited when a teacher explains that they are going to use PowerPoint for a project. There is something about PowerPoint that is creative, entertaining and appealing to kids.

My concern has always been that all of the focus on the "fluff" of PowerPoint will lead to PowerPointlessness. PowerPoint is a presentation tool so why is the content and message seem to be lost in the production?

I have come up with a solution that counteracts the focus on formatting and not on content. I teach students how to write out all of the content for their PowerPoint slides in a Word outline and focus on the information before I allow them to open up the PowerPoint program.

Today I taught the students how to change to outline view and place all slide titles on Level 1 of the outline and all body content on Level 2 of an outline. Students spent several days researching their topic and writing out the information on the outline. Resources were cited right on the outline and the focus was clearly what information was to be conveyed in the presentation.

When the students completed the outline, they opened PowerPoint and then opened the Word outline IN PowerPoint - and presto - all the text was placed on the appropriate slides. The students reaction is the best part - they loved it. They were amazed that these two software pieces work together seamlessly.

In class we discussed the value of what we just accomplished. Students commented:
  • You can focus on the writing and not get distracted by playing with animations.
  • Its easier to keep your train of thought when working in outline view.
  • You can write the outline at home and then come to school to work on PowerPoint
  • You must set up the outline correctly otherwise this process doesn't work.
  • It was cool to see all the text on the correct slides.
  • I never knew this could be done before.
  • I love learning new shortcuts!

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Teacher recommedations for on and off-task behaviors

After observing and recording on-task behaviors, here are some of my initial adjustments or recommendations:

  • Group projects
    • Provide written instructions so all know expectations
    • Give each student to a role to fulfill
    • 1-1 or 1-2 computing is ideal for sharing work - more than that does not give adequate time for students to participate
    • Have alternative tasks for those who finish early
  • Direct Instruction
    • Remove all distractions: headphones, open websites
    • Consider purchasing lab management software so all can easily view screen
    • Find out prior knowledge and do not demo skills already known
    • Keep direct instruction short and provide written instructions
  • Individual tasks
    • Provide written instructions
    • Remove all distractions: headphones, open websites
    • Stop class work time and encourage interaction and sharing
    • Intervene early with students who are stuck or off task

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

On task behavior documentation

For my ARP I have been documenting students behaviors during direct instruction time, during group project work and then during individual tasks. Here are some of my observations so far:
  • Group
    • initially there is a lot of discussion
    • some students made the decisions, other members wait for instructions
    • students confered with each other about progress during writing of article
    • when students were formatting their newspaper page, students who were not actually controlling the computer were not as involved.
    • groups that only had 1 or 2 members formatting per page were more on task than higher numbers
  • Direct Instruction
    • teacher can view 3/4 of screens from her vantage point and see if all are following along with instruction
    • students are engaged when instruction is unfamiliar - opening word outline in PPT
    • If students perceive they already know the material - they seem to "check out"
    • Where students sit in room seems to have direct impact of how well they pay attention. Students in front right row and back row do not watch demonstrations on overhead screen.
    • Off task behaviors include trying to use headphones to listen to music or websites, viewing own screen instead of demo, not looking at teacher, talking to neighbor
  • Individual tasks
    • some students work well on their own
    • some students need interaction or clarification to understand the task
    • if students have clear understanding of task, or written directions to refer to, they usually are more productive than those who have to stop and ask for clarifications
    • the more confident the student is in their ability to complete the task at hand, the more on task behavior I observed
    • personality & overall school achievement has a lot to do with on-task behaviors
chart of behaviors will be posted soon.

Monday, May 7, 2007

New Student Newspaper

My main focus this year is teaching technology skills with authentic projects that have real audiences. At the beginning of Cycle 3 I still had several skills to cover before the term was over, so I sat down with the students and asked them, "How can we learn these skills but at the same time find a real purpose and audience for our work".

I wanted to cover some desktop publishing features in Word, like: columns, section breaks, shading/borders, etc.. In the past the students have created a newsletter - but for no real audience. The students like the idea of creating a REAL newspaper that would be read by REAL students. The students chose to make a newspaper about our school to give to incoming students. I ran the idea past our admissions counselor and she loved the idea.

The students decided on an 8 page layout: Welcome, Academics (2), Activities (2), Sports (2) and General Information. They broke into groups, wrote articles, edited the documents with "track changes", decided on a layout template, added the stories/images, proofread again and printed the final version for the admission counselor to review.

The best part of the whole project is that I was really a “guide on the side” during the process. The students decided what they thought new students needed to know. I observed quite a few students showing other students how to format the newspaper a particular way. The whole project was very successful and I think the students showed a lot of enthusiasm for the assignment because I gave them choice in demonstrating their technical skills.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Cycle Three Plans

During the next cycle I will continue to provide lessons where the students create authentic projects for authentic audiences – but students will have more choice during this cycle.

After reviewing the National Technology standards for students and my scope and sequence of skills, I determine that students still exposure to more desktop publishing skills (columns, section breaks, drop cap, customized borders) but also review some general paragraph formatting skills (indents, before/after spacing, styles, and outlines). My plan is to list these technology skills for the students and give them some options on how we can use them in a project and let them decide as a class how to demonstrate their understanding. Some of the options will be: a class newspaper, a basic website, Word tutorials, etc. By allowing students to choose the format of their project I am hoping to increase ownership and engagement in learning.

We have not covered any PowerPoint skills this semester so the final capstone project of the term will be an integrated PowerPoint and Excel project. Students will be given the opportunity to choose any educational topic that is of interest to them and one that they could teach their classmates about. First they will determine prior knowledge by designing an Excel survey about their topic. Once they have collected that information, students will design an interactive PowerPoint presentation on their chosen topic. Direct instruction of the following PowerPoint skills will be covered: opening a Word outline in PowerPoint, creating a slide master, custom animation, action buttons, and adding sound or video to PowerPoint. Each PowerPoint project from the class will be linked together on a main project so all students can view each other’s projects.

The final days of class instruction will incorporate a “Choose your own Techventure” time – where students can pick any type of technology that we have at school and work individually or in groups to explore the software tools.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Cycle Two Evaluation

WHAT’S FOR LUNCH? – Cycle Two Evaluations 5/1/07

1. What year are you?

  • a. Freshmen – 11
  • b. Sophomore – 3
  • c. Junior – 2
  • d. Senior – 2

2. Which desktop publishing feature was the most beneficial to learn this term (multiple answers allowed)

  • a. Page border – 5
  • b. Word Art – 6
  • c. AutoShapes – 5
  • d. Text Boxes – 10
  • e. Diagram / Organizational Chart – 8
  • f. Insert Clip Art & Edit Picture – 6
  • g. Line / Arrow options 3
  • h. Shadow – 3
  • i. 3-D – 5
  • j. Font Effects – 5
  • k. Fill Color / Effects – 6
  • l. Align / rotate / flop – 6
  • m. Track Changes – 11
  • n. Other – 1 - Header / Footer & Indents

3. Which statement(s) best describe your opinion about the WHAT’S FOR LUNCH? project (multiple answers allowed)

  • a. I enjoyed taking photos of people’s lunch for data collection – 4
  • b. I enjoyed using Google shared spreadsheets for data collection – 4
  • c. I learned new desktop publishing features when I created my poster – 11
  • d. I learned how to record a podcast – 9
  • e. I learned the steps of a mail merge letter – 11
4. Please rate your understanding of the following Excel skills:


I still have difficulty with this skill

I need some help with this skill

I am comfortable with this skill

I could teach another student this skill

Formatting the spreadsheet

0

1

11

6

Writing a formula

0

0

11

7

Creating a graph

0

2

9

7


5. What suggested do you have for how the WHAT’S FOR LUNCH? project could be improved in the future (be specific: lunch data collection, poster, mail merge, or podcast)

  • a. I thought it was pretty good to be honest
  • b. During the lunch data collection, it might give better data if people take a picture of variety of lunches from home, school, etc..
  • c. More time to collect data
  • d. I liked how we did it.
  • e. I don’t have any
  • f. None
  • g. Can’t think of anything, sorry
  • h. I think that the podcast was a very good idea for a project. It gets the work done while at the same time you can play around and add in sound bites and things like that. I enjoyed it a lot.
  • i. For the podcast, we could learn more specifically how to add songs, or edit in a way that doesn’t seem choppy when you listen to it.
  • j. Nothing that I can think of. It had been taught very well. Going online and using different search engines to find out the information required made it fun.
  • k. Maybe put something in the paper to let other kids know and also let parents know.
  • l. Instead of taking pictures of the lunches, there should be a log in which the lunch is written down. The pictures can be obtained from Google images.
  • m. I think we could have come up with a more interactive way to use the info.
  • n. The only improvement I can think of is that instead of looking at all of the lunches it should be focused on what is most popular. That way people would have a better understanding of they like and normally eat.
  • o. I ‘m not sure I think that the project went well and it was informative.
  • p. I think lunch data should come from one specified site; some data doesn’t match even though the data contains same food.

6 Evaluate how well your group worked together on the mad lib mail merge project.


The statement is false

The statement is partly true

The statement is true

Everyone contributed to the writing of the mad lib

2

5

11

Everyone contributed when we went to the other groups to enter data

0

3

15

Everyone is our group understands how to do a mail merge

1

5

12





















On a scale of 1-5 rate your teacher on the follow items:


1 Poor

2 Just Ok

3 Good

4 Very Good

5 Excellent

Knowledge of technical skills

0

0

1

1

16

Availability for help

0

0

2

4

12

Feedback given to you about your progress

0

0

3

8

7

Ability to teach new skills

0

0

1

1

16

Friendliness

0

0

0

2

16

Motivates me to learn

0

0

5

6

8

TOTAL

0

0

12

22

75






















8 An effort was made during this Unit to give more direct instruction for technology skills. Was this helpful? Did you feel you needed it in order to be successful?

a. Yes, this was helpful. I feel I can learn better when the information is direct and not done through a project.

b. It was very helpful to learn many technological skills. With all the skills that we learned we were able to organize the data and make attractive looking posters. It might even help me later on when I need to work with Excel or Word Art.

c. Yes, it did.

d. Yeah, it was – except I didn’t need much help but when I did – it was effective.

e. Yes, learning the technological skills is the reason I signed up to take the class.

f. This was sort of helpful because I have taken a course like this before. The best and most important thing I have learned so far is how to track changes in Word.

g. Yes, this was very helpful. It motivated me to do even better.

h. Yes, I do think it was needed.

i. Yes, to both questions.

j. Yes, it was helpful, and since this was all new, it helped me in order to be successful, that there were specific instructions on what to do.

k. Learning how to do a mail merge – it makes writing a letter a much faster process than before.

l. I thought it was helpful and it did benefit me.

m. Yes, it was needed.

n. I thought that most of the stuff we learned was fun and useful - the mail merge, for example. I told my mom about it and she was like “Oh, show me how to do that when we get home, that’s how I will do my thank you letters from now on”.

o. Since I did not have a lot of understanding of computer skills at the start – and I do now – I’d say it was helpful and necessary.

p. I think it this was helpful and it was necessary to be successful.

q. Yes, it was helpful, and those technology skills are used during this whole unit.


9. During the next cycle, you will be asked to create a PowerPoint presentation. What is your experience with PowerPoint?


I have never done this before

I need a lot of help with this skill

I could do this skill with a little help

I am comfortable with this skill

Creating PowerPoint slides

0

0

2

16

Changing the slide design

0

0

4

14

Adding animations

2

0

6

10

Using the “master slide” template

3

4

7

4

Using and adding “action buttons”

4

2

7

6

Adding sounds or video

3

5

4

6









Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Mail Merge

Today students finished their mail merge letters. Students had the choice to write a letter in support or against Oregon House Bill 2650 - the removal of junk food in public schools -or- a letter about reducing lunch waste and incorporating a lunch recycling program at schools.

After conducting our own analysis of our school lunches and researching these two topics, students wrote their 1st drafts. Working in partners, the drafts were edited using "track changes" and finalized. Students looked up addresses for Oregon Senate leaders and editors of local newspapers. These addresses were inputed on a Google shared spreadsheet. The spreadsheet was exported for anyone to use.

I demonstrated the format of a full-block business letter. Students began the steps of the mail merge and added the appropriate "fields" in the letter. Using the mail merge helper allowed students to preview their letters before merging. The final letters were printed, signed, envelopes were addressed and mailed.

My goal in doing the letter campaign was to give students an authentic reason for learning how to write a formal business letter and to learn the steps of a mail merge letter. One student summed up his feelings, "I don't know if my letter will make any difference but at least they know how us teenagers feel".

Monday, April 23, 2007

Podcasting fun!

Today was the first time in class that my students tried podcasting. Students had a choice of whether to write a mail-merge letter or create a podcast to share their views on Oregon House Bill 2650 (eliminating junk food from schools) or the topic of lunch waste. Three different groups chose podcasting - and after the looks and giggles today - I am sure a few of the other groups wished they had chosen to record their opinions too.

The podcast/mail-merge assignment is the final activity in the What's for Lunch? curriculum unit. Originally the students took photos of lunches for one week and analyzed the nutrition content, cost and waste using an Excel spreadhseet. Next, the students created a desktop publishing poster that was hung in the cafeteria and classroom. This final assignment is to have the students share their knowledge with people outside the classroom.

Students used Audacity to record their podcasts. Many times I observed them rerecording sections to make it just right. All of the groups imported short audio segments for the intro music to the podcast. All three groups were completely engaged during the class sessions and were having fun too!

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Desktop Publishing

Goal: To create a one page poster to educate or influence student’s decisions or attitudes towards lunch nutrition, cost effectiveness, or reducing lunch waste.


Skills:Use 8 of the following desktop publishing features on your poster

  • Page Border
  • Word Art
  • Auto Shapes
  • Text Boxes
  • Diagram / Organizational Chart
  • Insert Clip Art & Edit Picture
  • Line/Arrow options
  • Shadow
  • 3-D
  • Font Effects
  • Fill Color / Effects
  • Align / Rotate / Flip


Message:
Look at your Lunch data. Pick one area that you feel that you could educate or influence others. For example, make a poster encouraging students to make healthy food choices, or suggest bringing a lunch from home to reduce lunch waste.

Observation:

  • I created a one-page reference page that showed students how to customize each of the skills listed above.
  • Students used the reference page often to learn make the poster.
  • There was a lot of interaction between the students about how they were customizing the features for their poster.
  • All 18 students completed the activity.
  • The posters were hung up around the school.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Excel Formula Quiz & Assessment

Last Thursday the class took a quiz to check for comprehension of Excel vocabulary words and understanding of how to write an Excel formula. Out of 18 students - 2 students completely bombed the test and 3 others made some critical mistakes - but the other 13 did fine.

I decided to have one-on-one conferences to go over the quizzes and their last Excel project with each student. This is giving me the opportunity to re-teach some skills and check for understanding. The two students who bombed the test will retake it tommorrow. With the others I can point out what they are doing right and also how to correct mistakes.

My students scored "giving feedback" lowest on my teacher evaluation and I am making steps to correct this and make sure that learning and understanding are the focus of my classes - not grades.

QUIZ

% passed
greater 70%

% failed
less 70%

Class Average

Section One: Excel vocabulary terms

83.3%

16.6%

85%

Section Two: Writing formulas

50%

50%

62%

Total



77%


After the quiz I held individual conferences with the student to review the material. I collected these comments from the students during the conferences:

  • I mixed up the definitions of a formula and function.
  • I knew how to write the formula; I just wasn’t sure which cell references to use.
  • I don’t have any difficulty with basic functions.
  • Since the summary was separate from the data, I found it challenging to write the formulas.
  • I can get the formula to work on the computer with the help of the Insert Function button; I just have a harder time writing them out during a quiz.
  • The AutoSum functions make it easy to calculate totals and averages.
  • I chose the correct numbers for the formula – I just missed some of the punctuation on the formula and that wouldn’t happen if I was using the computer.
  • I didn’t study the vocabulary before the test.

Friday, April 6, 2007

Student Pre-Evaluation / Teacher Post - Evaluation

Students were asked to self-evaluate their spreadsheet for Excel Assignment #1 using the following rubric. Students had an opportunity to make correction to their assignment after evaluating their work.

Please rate your SPREADSHEET for the following items:

Student Pre-Evaluation


Poor

OK

Good

Very Good

Excellent



There is a clear title that is centered across columns

0%

0%

10%

20%

70%


Labels are formatted in a way to make them noticeable

0%

10%

0%

20%

70%


Basic Formulas (sum, average) are calculated correctly

0%

0%

10%

0%

80%


Advanced Formulas (countif, sumif) are calculated correctly

0%

0%

10%

10%

70%


Spreadsheet is formatted in an attractive manner.

0%

0%

0%

40%

60%

Please rate your SPREADSHEET for the following items:

Teacher Post-Evaluation


Poor

OK

Good

Very Good

Excellent



There is a clear title that is centered across columns

0%

0%

0%

0.5%

94%


Labels are formatted in a way to make them noticeable

0%

0%

0%

33%

67%


Basic Formulas (sum, average) are calculated correctly

0%

0.5%

0.5%

0.5%

83%


Advanced Formulas (countif, sumif) are calculated correctly

0%

0%

0%

0%

100%


Spreadsheet is formatted in an attractive manner.

0%

0%

0%

0.5%

94%


Students were asked to self-evaluate their chart for Excel Assignment #1 using the following rubric. Students had an opportunity to make correction to their assignment after evaluating their work.

Please rate your CHART for the following items:

Student Pre-Evaluation


Poor

OK

Good

Very Good

Excellent



Chart has clear & specific title

0%

0%

10%

20%

70%


The chart type is appropriate for the data

0%

0%

0%

40%

60%


All appropriate data is included on the chart

0%

0%

10%

20%

70%


The chart contains labels or includes a legend

0%

0%

10%

20%

80%


The chart is formatted in an attractive manner.

0%

0%

10%

20%

70%



Please rate your CHART for the following items:

Teacher Post-Evaluation


Poor

OK

Good

Very Good

Excellent



Chart has clear & specific title

0%

0%

0.5%

72%

22%


The chart type is appropriate for the data

0%

0%

0%

0%

100%


All appropriate data is included on the chart

0%

0%

0.5%

0.5%

89%


The chart contains labels or includes a legend

0%

0%

0%

22%

78%


The chart is formatted in an attractive manner.

0%

0%

0%

0%

100%