Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Closing Keynote

How might your students, colleagues, etc. benefit from your learnings this week?
How might you be a conduit for influencing the future?
How can you be even more powerful as an agent of change?
How might they feel if they were here this week?

Share what you have learned with other educators.

Deforestation

  • Need for change and focus on this issue
  • Importance of ecology in our future
  • 3d world with the Kinect and other modern technologies to create these connections. 
  • TOUCH project that on Orangtun's using touch screens using their lips to touch. 
  • More than just a term
  • Global webinars with students from around the world to learn about deforestation literally in the setting. Collaboration of everyone can help with this. Made this textbook literally come alive for students. 
  • Add this project onto your current lesson plans as an add-on (math and science examples)
  • Committ to global app (take the pledge)

http://collaborateforchange.com/tag/deforestation/
http://www.deforestaction.org

You go first! Embracing BYOD

Website: http://byod.metiri.wikispaces.net

BYOD guide: http://byod.metiri.wikispaces.net/file/view/BYOD+Guide+FINAL.pdf

Check out these links for resources

The future of the flipped classroom

Websites: flippedlearning.org, flippedclass.com, flipped-learning.com, flippedlearning.eduvision.tv

Contact: Aaron Sams (Arron@flippedclass.com & twitter @chemicalsams)

Contact: Jon Bergmann (Jon@flippedclass.com & twitter @jonbergman)

This was an inspiring and informing lesson, led by two very engaging science teachers. Check out the notes:

Ask the question, what is the most valuable use of class time?

What is the flipped classroom: what you used to do in class you do at home and vice versa. This is where it starts, but not where it stops. Opens door to give more time in class to move beyond content standards. It's not about the videos, it's about what you do inside the classroom.

Think like a good teacher first, and then someone who likes to plug in shiny new technology second.

Flipped classroom is built in the classroom, in the trenches. It's a tool in your tool box, not a binder to apply or a pedagogy like constructivism.

Purpose is to create a learner-centered, inquiry based classroom.

Research behind the flipped classroom is still emerging at this point.

Flipped classroom is scalable, could be for class lesson, unit, class, school, district.

Videos should cover the bottom two of blooms (remembering/understanding)

Myths and misconceptions:
1. Flipped learning relies on videos (doesn't have to)
2. Flipped learning creates a digital divide (can use flash drive, or DVD to distribute to students without net)
3. Flipped learning relies on homework (doesn't have to, can use asynchronous classroom with flexibility)
4. Flipped learning propagates bad teaching/lectures. (Videos can be interactive and better than recorded lecture. Digital writing on power point/videos from outside. Can make videos with other teachers online, use google hangout).
5. Flipped learning requires front loading with video. Can learn wrong at home. (Video doesn't always have to be front loaded)

Good classroom buzz words:
1. UDL: multiple ways to learn content, multiple ways to prove they learned, and multiple ways to
2. Inquiry learning
3. Project based learning
4. Mastery
5. AFL
6. PD
(this list went on but I missed them)
Flipped class if the glue that holds these together! Provides the opportunity to do these in the classroom.

Future of the flipped classroom will rethink the school day schedule, how furniture is arranged in the room. Create learning centers in the room for asynchronous classes.

How should flipped classroom affect hiring: hire facilitators, voracious Learners.

Matt spent this session in the poster area talking with Kristin Daniels who started the Flipped Learning Network.. They are a terrific resource for schools that want to reimagine how to deliver PD for teachers.

www.flippedlearning.org
kristin@flippedlearning.org
@kadaniels

Apps for Higher Level Thinking

 This was an awesome meeting of the best App minds in the country.  The panel and audience members shared Apps for higher order thinking and how they used it.  We will have to clean up this blog post later.  This was an inspirational event and it was great to have the whole Wilton team together for this one, even though it was late and we were tired.

Tech Chef 4 U Blog
Sue Gorman blog for Apps.
Judy Akey- Ed Reach- mobile reach podcast
Kelly DuMont- Mac Reach on Ed Reach
Meg Wilson- 1000 Apps on one iPad

Survey Boy- allows kids to collect data on the iPad and show graphic.

Display Recorder- screencast on the iPad

Compare or Twist- cyclone from SMARTBoard feature on iPad.

Bill Atkinson Photo Card- create your own postcard. Free... Write text to go with the photo.

Kids Journal- special Ed app. Make a journal that exports to iBooks.

Type Drawing: make drawings out of text. Type in a word and it becomes the line.

Creative Book Builder: link your Google doc shared doc to the app then build a full multimedia digital text.

Coaches Eye: annotate over the video

iPad Sammy shows the group the Tech Chef 4 U app.

Photo Annotate: drop pinpoints on a photo and lets you annotate that area of the image.

iCard Sort: Allows you to blast note cards out and kids sort the cards.

Garage Band and Puppet Pal. Rich Colossi 1st grade teacher.

Tiny Tap: record a question and then trace on the photo.

Scribble Press: digital book creation app that is free.

Near Pod: teacher and student app. Put in a presentation. Give out a pin number. Loads the presentation on student apps.

On Air: creates a TelePrompter on the the iPad

Leaf Snap: trees of the us mashes up with maps

Quizlet: not an app.

Sub text: works with google books. Read a book together and comment as a class.