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  • Educators worldwide are very willing to share what they know and Twitter is a huge resource for professional development. By following a simple hashtag title entire discussions can open up to you.
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    Fly to Twitter for Online PD

    by Marjie Podzielinski
     | Jul 18, 2014

    Fly to Twitter for Online PDWhat do you know about Twitter?  Before the World Cup took over social media this summer, the largest number of tweets were sent by educators.  Educators worldwide are very willing to share what they know and Twitter is a huge resource for professional development. By following a simple hashtag title entire discussions can open up to you.

    I have used Twitter extensively for the last year.  I love to follow educational  conventions in progress.  At the International Reading Association’s conference in May (#IRA14), I tweeted during every session I attended.  There is no way you can be in every session offered, so it is fun to go back and read the highlights of the day.  I love the on-site interaction these tweets bring, but I have also used Twitter for conventions I cannot afford to attend.  By going to the search bar and typing in the event, I was able to find the hashtags for the Texas Library Association Conference (#TLA2014) and the American Library Association Conference in Las Vegas (#alaac14).  Watching these tweets provided links to new books, outstanding presenters, and session highlights, though the Texas conference brings up an interesting issue. Sometimes a hashtag is used for more than one event/subject. You may have to wade through some unrelated tweets to get to the topic you want, be patient! 

    Simultaneous to the ALA conference was the International Society for Technology in Education conference (#ISTE14).  How great is it to be in two places at once?  It is easy to click to follow someone on Twitter and on a daily basis you can read the headlines of what is important in education. 

    The Children’s Literature Association Conference (#ChLA14), led to a lively conversation on “We need diverse books,” a huge topic at the moment. Sometimes conferences are entirely virtual.  Following #cyberPD leads to an ongoing discussion about Donalyn Miller’s “Reading in the Wild,” and the importance of reading and #TCRWP is the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project and a Twitter chat on Colonial Williamsburg.

    Last week Dr. Teri Lesesne led a workshop for teachers in my district.  Did I miss out? No.  Teri tweeted (#cisd14) so we could follow the book talks from her session.  Now I can go back and look for the books discussed. When my teachers come back to my campus I will know exactly what they are talking about!  It is also a great way to create a book list of new books you want to read to include in your lessons.  All of the participants in this workshop were introduced to Twitter.  Now they are off learning all that Twitter has to offer!

    I urge you to sign up for a Twitter account and get started on the path to the best educational resource ever.  Follow #IRATODAY and #IRACHAT for some great educational resources, you will love it. And follow me at @marjiepodge.

    Marjie Podzielinski is a member of the Advisory Committee of Teachers and a librarian at Coulson Tough School in The Woodlands, Texas. Follow her on Twitter at @marjiepodge.

    This article is part of a series from the International Reading Association’s Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG).

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  • Wix—a tool that helps you incorporate HTML web content, uses Web 2.0 tools also builds on the skills of the plugged-in generation of students currently in our schools.
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    Take Time to Wix

    by Kimberly Kimbell-Lopez, Carrice Cummins, and Elizabeth Manning
     | Jul 11, 2014

    Take Time to  Wix With the multitude of web resources available, it has become much easier to make classroom content available to our students.  The challenge, however, is how best to provide access to appropriate websites; sometimes it just helps to pre-select resources and web sites for students to use. This issue can be addressed by using Wix (www.wix.com)—a tool that helps you incorporate HTML web content. Using Web 2.0 tools also builds on the skills of the plugged-in generation of students currently in our schools. S.M. Sweeney emphasized that the way youth today read, write, and communicate is continuously being changed by modern information and communication technologies—they live in an environment where they are able to stay connected and communicate with each other constantly. “Their writing uses the mediums of instant messaging (IM), text messaging (texting), Twitter, and email, as well as shared electronic documents and postings on blogs and social networking sites.” Similarly, J.S. Blanchard and A.E. Farstrup emphasized that “today’s children are the most technologically experienced generation ever to walk through the doors of our schools and into our classrooms for reading instruction.”

    Wix is a medium that appeals to this new generation of technology users. The Wix site uses a drag/drop, click/point approach to guide the user through website development.  Designers may select from numerous predesigned templates or simply create a template from scratch. It is then easy to edit, add, and/or delete any components that might be included on the page, such as menu titles, new pages, transitions, pictures, clip art, music, and video. You can also make information available to download in several file formats including Adobe PDF and Microsoft Word.

    There are numerous ways to use Wix in the classroom, so be creative (e.g. personal webpages, professional information, or general information for classes). One way we’ve seen Wix used successfully is in the creation of inquiry projects. "The Freshwater Swamp Tour" inquiry project, created by Cindy Wallace, guided her high school students through a tour of Louisiana swamps. Once completed, their task was to use Microsoft Publisher to create a flyer featuring a real estate ad designed to sell the swamp. The flyers were shared via a Wix website.

    "Historical Places to Visit" was created for Kim Bailey’s third grade class.  After her students finished their exploration of historical sites, they were tasked with using Wix to create a virtual storybook illustrating what they learned. Below is one example of the storybooks they created. 

    Wix is so user friendly that it is possible to create a web site in a few hours or less. Wix is also free, which means it offers endless possibilities for augmenting more traditional textbook and paper/pencil activities by integrating new literacies within your classroom instruction. Take time to Wix today!

    Elizabeth Manning is an assistant professor in the Department of Curriculum, Instruction, and Leadership in the College of Education at Louisiana Tech University. A veteran K-8 teacher of 23 years, her areas of interest include content area literacy, writing workshop, and curriculum design and development. Dr. Manning can be contacted via email at lmanning@latech.edu.





    Carrice Cummins is a professor in the Department of Curriculum, Instruction, and Leadership in the College of Education at Louisiana Tech University. She has 37 years’ experience as an educator with primary areas of interest in comprehension, content area literacy, and teacher development. She served as the 2012-13 president of the International Reading Association. She can be contacted via email at carrice@latech.edu.





    Kimberly Kimbell-LopezKimberly Kimbell-Lopez is a professor in the Department of Curriculum, Instruction, and Leadership in the College of Education at Louisiana Tech University. She has been an educator for over 25 years, and her areas of expertise include literacy and technology. She can be contacted via email at kkopez@latech.edu

    This article is part of a series from the International Reading Association’s Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG).

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  • In 2013, Nelleke Belo, Susan McKenney, and Joke Voogt conducted a review to further understand research outcomes in the use of technology for early literacy acquisition in the kindergarten classroom.
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    Technologies for Acquiring and Making Literacy

    by Richard E. Ferdig
     | Jun 27, 2014
    Technologies for Acquiring and Making Literacy
    photo credit: Massachusetts Secretary of Education
    via photopin cc

    In 2013, Nelleke Belo, Susan McKenney, and Joke Voogt conducted a review to further understand research outcomes in the use of technology for early literacy acquisition in the kindergarten classroom. Drawing on four academic literature databases, the research team narrowed 13,070 initial hits to 46 articles that met their selection criteria. These articles, explicitly focused on technology as an independent variable, were aimed at kindergarten-age students, included early literacy development, and were published after 2001. Drawing on previous research affordances as well as gaps in the literature, the authors asked:

    • What is the content and focus of studies on technology and ICT applications in relation to early literacy development?
    • What kinds of evidence do these studies provide about the affordances of technology and ICT for fostering early literacy development?

    The 46 articles were representative of studies of electronic storybooks (11), computer-based training programs (11), and technology-based curriculum supplements (11). The authors also found studies related to full curriculum (5), assistive technologies (4), and other media such as websites and television (4). Based on these studies, the authors suggest two overall findings.

    • There is positive evidence of the role of technology in supporting early literacy acquisition for this age group.
    • In a majority of the studies used in the analysis, there was a lack of attention paid to the role of the teacher. The specific study outcomes may be promising but they may also be more difficult to replicate without this information.

    Review articles like the one offered by Belo et al. are critical to our field. Where specific studies lend insight into the use of particular technologies or methodologies, reviews like this offer researchers and practitioners a chance to step back and paint a picture of the field. The portrait represents successes and areas that need improvement. In addition to the two broad stated conclusions, there are at least two other important outcomes that can be gleaned from the analysis.

    First, technologies have affordances and constraints making them more or less useful in different circumstances. The review provided evidence that electronic storybooks can lead to significant early literacy gains. However, there were also other technologies highlighted in this review that were successful in literacy acquisition. More importantly, electronic storybooks impacted literacy skills differently based on the interactivity they afforded and the number of student interactions offered.

    This all sounds like common sense: you would not use an electronic storybook for every literacy goal and you would not assume all electronic storybooks work the same. However, there seems to be an innate desire, often verbalized by reporters, who attempt to glorify or villainize emerging tools and technologies. Technology can positively impact emergent literacy acquisition, however, it does not mean it always will. Some electronic storybooks used in certain ways can positively impact literacy skill development, however, it does not mean all e-books will work all the time, even if they demonstrate success in one environment.

    Literacy researchers should be promoting a deeper understanding of the role of such technologies by asking a different type of question. Instead of wondering if technology can promote literacy acquisition or even if electronic storybooks work, it is more prudent to ask under what situations or circumstances will certain technologies work. The answer to “do electronic storybooks work?” is not yes or no—it’s sometimes, and under certain circumstances. Literacy practitioners should thus be cautious about interpreting results of research studies in terms of broad-sweeping claims. Instead of asking if it works, practitioners should push to understand when it could work or the conditions under which it works or fails to work.

    Unfortunately, as the authors conclude, researchers seem to understand—and then forget—the importance of the teacher. Knowing how to teach and understanding literacy acquisition are both obviously different than knowing how to teach literacy.  Arguably knowing how to teach literacy with technology is yet another set of skills.   As such, it would be prudent to know more about the teacher involvement and requisite professional development of technology and literacy implementations. These were left out of many of the stated studies, reducing the ability of researchers and practitioners to further implement or confirm the outcomes.

    What is striking about the 46 studies is that most of them seemed to be about technologies or experiences where children consumed media. That statement is not meant to be a definitive description of the 46 studies, there were obviously facets of many programs where children were producing artifacts of learning. Nor is it meant to be an indictment against consumable media, these are important in scaffolding learning.

    It simply demonstrates a lack of published research on technologies and experiences rooted in student development and production for those age and date ranges. Compare this to the movement of production as literacy as evidenced by the coding movement or the notion that production can lead to literacy gains (e.g. see Jason Ohler’s resources about Digital Storytelling in the Classroom).  Think about the “maker movement” (e.g. http://makerfaire.com/) identified through tools like 3D printers and Lego Mindstorms (http://mindstorms.lego.com).

    In the end, such analyses help us evaluate our current literacy stances. Are we creating new technologies that mirror our pedagogical stances? Are technologies pushing our pedagogical strategies in intended and unintended ways? And/or are we utilizing the technologies outside of literacy to better inform our pedagogical needs in literacy acquisition and instruction?

    Rick FerdigDr. Richard E. Ferdig is the Summit Professor of Learning Technologies and Professor of Instructional Technology at the Research Center for Educational Technology, Kent State University, rferdig@gmail.com.

    This article is part of a series from the International Reading Association’s Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG).


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  • Use audio recording apps, social networking, and blogging to reflect and benefit your students and your own progress as an educator.
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    Digital Tools for Teacher Reflection

    by Alexandra Panos
     | Jun 20, 2014
    Computer
    photo credit: boellstiftung via photopin cc

    As teachers, we learn how to improve at our jobs every day by being with students in the classroom. We learn from our mistakes and our successes, our bad days and our good ones. Bit by bit, year by year, we become experts. Marilyn Cochran-Smith and Susan Lytle (Inquiry as Stance: Practitioner Research in the Next Generation, 2009) call this work—of the actively involved, inquiring teacher—“theory building.” Through theory building we develop informed and well-articulated “theories” or knowledge about one’s classroom. The practice of reflection and inquiry into our methods and the realities of our students’ lives and learning require time and work, as we all know too well. I have found that digital tools support this work by making reflection smoother and more accessible in the short and long term.

    Digital tools afford us unique ways to reflect. The reality is that teachers have always reflected. Honing the tools we use to reflect and connect them to the purposes we have for reflection can help us build relationships, support student learning, and adjust our approaches to lessons.

    These are three ways to approach reflection in the classroom in order to benefit your students and your own progress as an educator:

    • Taking “snapshots” of your day with audio recording apps
    • Capturing student thinking with classroom social networking
    • Processing for the long term with your own blog

    Take “Snapshots” of Your Day With Audio Recording Apps

    How many times has a sticky note stuck on your desk reminded you to call a parent or check in with a student about missing work? Taking snapshots of your day can help you sort through the major events of the day as well as work as a good reminder system and re-set for the following morning. Rather than write down notes, taking a snapshot of your thinking at the end of the day using audio recording apps on your phone or tablet can allow you to think about the day and make a plan for tomorrow.

    For my purposes, I use my cell phone to record major events of the day, concerns about students, and reminders on my way home or while sitting at my desk before leaving for the day. Then, the next morning I check in with myself. Try searching your app store for:

    Here free audio recording apps for Android phones:

    And here are free audio recording apps for iPhone/iPad:

    Capture Student Thinking With Online Forums

    We know that a better understanding of student thinking on a day-to-day basis benefits learning outcomes. Thus, at the end of lessons we have our summarizing activities or our exit slips or some other creative way to touch base with our students as they head out of class. Another way to do this is through school-based, password-protected social media sites. These sites allow you to throw out a question, share a link, or ask students to do the same. Depending on your school and student population’s access to technology, this could be done at school or at home.

    I have found that using this type of digital tool to pose open-ended questions or for private messaging (so that students can ask questions without the risk of embarrassment) helped me get a better sense of how students feel and think about content and life in the classroom. Here, I am sharing just two of many social networking sites for schools that are protected, free, easy to use, and student/parent friendly.

    Here are some social networking sites for the classroom:

    • Edmodo: Includes a newsfeed, posting options, etc., which makes it operate much like Facebook. Also includes a library for documents, quizzing/polling options, and small group options. Allows you to network with other classes in your school and with educators around the world.
    • twiducate: Functions much as does Twitter, with short posts allowing the embedding of files, videos and images. Much more limited than Edmodo, but does include post threading and like functions.

    Processing for the Long Term With Your Own Blog

    The ideas and tools above support daily rather than long-term or project-/unit-oriented reflection. These are snapshots, quick moments captured to understand events and problems that occur quickly. To process and reflect for long-term writing, developing a blog, or digital “journal” on a weekly or project-basis can help develops theories of the classroom. Blog posts can be focused on a weekly set of lessons, on a unit or project, on a standard, or on a particular issue in your school or class. Unlike a paper journal, it allows for the inclusion of digital materials such as lesson plans, photos of student work, and links to resources that will benefit you in the future.

    When writing a blog with the purpose of reflection, you might ask yourself three questions:

    • What happened (in this lesson, unit, project, standard)? What is the story I would tell?
    • What have I learned? Where can I identify the successes and the failures?
    • What will I take away? How will I change for the next time?

    Here are some blogging platforms that allow for password protection or a disabling of search functionality:

    When reflection becomes part of your daily and long-term habits you act as a curious inquirer into the ways your classroom operates, ultimately becoming a theory builder and expert on your own learning and that of your students.

    Alexandra PanosAlexandra Panos is a doctoral fellow in Literacy, Culture and Language Education at Indiana University and former middle grades Language Arts teacher.

    This article is part of a series from the International Reading Association’s Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG)

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  • Writing to a real audience through a blog post is an excellent way to develop audience awareness.
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    Promoting a Collaborative Environment With Classroom Blogs

    by Marilyn E. Moore
     | Jun 13, 2014
    Students on computers
    photo credit: shareski via photopin cc

    Digital technologies have become a necessary element of learning. Blogs have become very popular in the classroom especially to promote writing. “Blogs are interactive web pages where individuals can post entries, articles, links and pictures, and ask others to join in conversations” (Cohen & Cowen, Literacy for Children in an Information Age: Teaching Reading, Writing, and Thinking, 2011, p. 51). Writing to a real audience through a blog post is an excellent way to develop audience awareness.

    A group of students who share a common interest in a topic can engage in various activities which include: 1) working on a specific task after reading connected text, 2) assigning discussion questions for teams to respond to, 3) using a case-study approach to solve a problem, and 4) presenting projects or reports online. An example of such an activity would be to write a book review for a blog. A student would inform readers of the group about the book of their choice by introducing the book, telling about the book without giving away the ending, telling about their favorite part of the book, and recommending or not recommending the book to everyone.

    There are many free blogs that facilitate interactive information sharing in collaborative digital environments. Below are blog resources for teachers.

    • Kidblog:  www.kidblog.org  – Students publish posts and participate in academic discussions.
    • MixedInk: www.mixedink.com – Small groups or a whole class draft and reflect on several versions of a text written on the same topic.
    • Cool Cat Teacher Blog: www.coolcatteacher.com – Students doing research or science fair projects are able to compile it in an infographic (written artifacts about collected resources in a visual format).
    • Google site: www.blogger.com – Readers will see sender’s profile using Google+ Profile. Students are able to read their classmates’ posts and comment on them.
    • Voki.com: www.voki.com – Students use Voki.com to create and then share a talking Avatar onto a blog post or e-mail a friend by clicking on publish.
    • Parsley Patriot Kids: www.blog.parsleypatriotkids.blogspot.com – Students upload stories about adventures of their school class pet or class mascot.
    • Wordpress: http://wordpress.org – Students share favorite stories over 1,500 words.
    • Weebly: www.weebly.com – Students create a unique blog site.
    • Interesting Way Series: EDTECH@edte.ch/blog -- A site where teachers can learn 64 interesting ideas for class blog posts.

    Teachers need to talk to their students about the postings to these blogs to make this approach effective.

    As you consider barriers to implementing blogs in your classroom, it is important to make sure that the barriers do not overpower the instructional goal. Lack of time during a class period may be a barrier to the integration of information and communication technology into literacy instruction. However, technology has redefined how knowledge is produced. Creation of knowledge can be as simple as a blog post.

    Marilyn MooreMarilyn E. Moore, Ed. D., (mmoore@nu.edu) is a Professor and Faculty Lead for the Reading Program at National University, La Jolla, California.

    This article is part of a series from the International Reading Association’s Technology in Literacy Education Special Interest Group (TILE-SIG)

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