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    Tips for Success with Technology in the Classroom

     | Oct 07, 2011
    by Janice Friesn 

    Technology used in thoughtful positive ways can open up possibilities for teachers and students.  It is a part of every day life for students and yet when they come to school they often have to learn without it. As a technology support specialist in eMINTS in Missouri and also working in the Eanes School district in Texas, I have seen many barriers for teachers when using technology. From time to time I will be contributing to the Engage blog posts tips and strategies for keeping up with the potential challenges of using technology on a daily basis. This first article starts with an overview of five tips for dealing with classroom technology. 

    Enhance Your Lessons
    Use technology when it adds something of value to your lessons, not just for the sake of using it. If you need ideas use these searchable sites for some great links to use in your lessons.
    Read Write Think - www.readwritethink.org - One example is the student interactive activity “Character Trading Cards.” Students create and print trading cards. Includes many lesson plans.
    Thinkfinity - www.thinkfinity.org - Thousands of searchable free lesson plans and links to really useful websites.
    Delicious - http://delicious.com - Search links posted by others to find something you can use.

    Always Have a Plan B
    Be ready to do something different if the network is down or if all of the laptops seem to be acting up. (Also trust your kids, sometimes it is easy for them to figure out something that seems impossible to you.)

    Baby Steps
    Every school year take on at least one challenge for yourself in using technology.  You do not have to teach every subject and every lesson with technology, but you do need to keep stretching yourself and using more. One way is by searching the sites above or YouTube for ideas. Using http://keepvid.com allows you to easily download a YouTube video that supports what you are teaching.

    Learn from Each Other
    Collaboration is the key with using technology. Learn from what other teachers in your school are doing and share with them. Blog and twitter are other way you can learn from and share with other teachers.
    Twitter - Twitter in Education  
    Blogs - Blogs written by educators

    Relax 

    This may be the most difficult of all. When I feel the stress and anxiety growing I have found that stopping for a while and going back relaxed makes such a difference.

    Technology can also give you a new perspective on teaching. I know many teachers who were close to retirement, but technology brought new life into their teaching. Try it! It can be fun! 

    Janice Friesen is a self-employed teacher. Her business “I’m not a Geek.com” helps people to be successful using technology. Her searchable blog http://helpimnotageek.blogspot.com offers tips for successful use of technology. 

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    Verizon Thinkfinity’s iCivics Impact Challenge

     | Oct 04, 2011
    Verizon Thinkfinity invites teachers of grades five through 12 to enter the iCivics Impact Challenge between now and November 30, 2011. Winners receive a VGo Robot and videoconference session with retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor for your school. 

    Thinkfinity iCivicsThrough the iCivics Impact Challenge, students can extend the learning beyond Constitution Day by visiting icivics.org and earning points while playing educational games related to the Supreme Court, the U.S. Constitution, presidential roles, and other civics-related topics. The games engage students in evaluating Supreme Court cases, becoming active in their community, voting, determining budgets, passing laws, arguing cases before a judge, and even being president for a day. The team with the highest number of points at midnight on November 30, 2011, wins the grand prize. 

    For more ideas on how to make civics engaging in the classroom:
    Visit the Speaker Series section of the Thinkfinity Community to watch our interview with retired Justice Sandra Day O'Connor as she tells us why she created iCivics, how to keep students engaged in civic life, and what civic knowledge students need to know before they graduate. 
    Add your ideas to the discussion: What would you ask retired Supreme Court Justice O'Connor about teaching students civics?  
    Visit the History Explorers group in the Thinkfinity Community to exchange ideas on making civics curriculum more compelling: What can teachers do to enliven civic education and inspire active participation? Do you think some form of civic engagement should be required as part of a school's core curriculum? 

    For additional lessons, interactive games and activities, visit the Constitution Day collection on Thinkfinity.org


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    Fulbright Teacher Program Deadlines

     | Sep 28, 2011

    The deadline to apply for the Fulbright Teacher Program is October 15, 2011. The Fulbright Teacher Exchange Program is an international professional development program that provides opportunities for K-12 teachers to participate in direct exchanges of positions with colleagues from other countries for a semester or a year. By living and working abroad, exchange teachers gain an understanding and appreciation of different educational systems and cultures, and enrich their schools and communities by providing students with new perspectives about the world in which they live. 

    Jeff Blair, 2009-10 U.S. Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching participant at the Fezeka Senior Secondary School in Guguletu, South AfricaFulbright exchanges result in continuing relationships between schools, some of which establish their own student and faculty exchanges and Internet links.  In other instances, exchanges benefit local communities by providing them with international resources that are not otherwise available. International collaborations such as these foster enduring relationships and continuously provide students with opportunities to increase their subject knowledge and understand its relevance in the greater context of the world. Participating teachers develop and share their expertise with colleagues abroad, and schools gain from the experience of having an international resource in their communities. 

    Full-time U.S. teachers are eligible to apply for a year-long or semester-long direct exchange of teaching positions with a counterpart in another country teaching the same subject(s) at the same level. Fulbright program staff in the U.S. and abroad match U.S. and overseas candidates in the spring of each year. Then, Fulbright staff propose matched-exchanges that each candidate and each school administration must approve before the program takes place. For more information, see http://www.fulbrightteacherexchange.org/cte.cfm

    Applications for the 2012-2013 Distinguished Fulbright Awards in Teaching are due by December 15, 2011. These awards are designed to recognize and encourage excellence in teaching in the U.S. and abroad. They select 24 highly talented U.S. and international teachers to receive a grant to study at a university, conduct research, teach classes and workshops, and develop a project pertaining to their field of educational inquiry during their semester overseas. 

    Sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State, the Distinguished Fulbright Awards in Teaching program recognizes and encourages excellence in teaching in the U.S. and abroad. The program sends highly accomplished primary and secondary teachers from the U.S. abroad and brings international teachers to the U.S for a three to six month long program. Participating countries in 2012-2013 are: Argentina, Finland, India, Israel, Mexico, Morocco, Singapore, South Africa, and the United Kingdom.

    This highly prestigious program will provide U.S. award recipients with the opportunity to study in an overseas research center or university. International participants will gather at a single U.S. university college of education which will provide a broad range of education classes and faculty support. Participants can take advanced undergraduate or graduate level classes, conduct research, design and lead seminars for host country teachers and students, and engage in other teaching related activities. Grantees will propose an action-based research project at the time of application that should encourage cross-cultural dialogue, reflection, and support teaching activities. In conjunction with a host institution mentor, each grantee will design program activities that will enhance the action-based research project and contribute to its successful completion. Upon returning home, teachers will be expected to share the knowledge and experience gained on the program with teachers and students in their home schools and within their communities. 

    Grantees will be expected to produce a final action-based research project at the end of the program, with the form and content of the project proposed by the applicant at the time of application; projects should encourage cross-cultural dialogue and support future teaching activities. Participants should be creative in developing program activities that will enhance their project and contribute to its successful implementation. Each international teacher will be encouraged to give presentations on their project activities, and to compile written reflections and photographic or other records of their U.S. experiences. 

    Program costs such as tuition, room and board, and transportation are covered by the grant; participants will receive a maintenance allowance designed to assist with the costs of food and lodging during the program. Distinguished Teachers will also have the opportunity to apply for professional development funds to support development and research, or cover the expenses of attending a conference or workshop related to their fields of teaching expertise. Dependents may accompany program participants; all dependents' expenses, however, will be paid for by the grantee. See http://www.fulbrightteacherexchange.org/dteIndex.cfm

    for information. 

    Photo caption: Jeff Blair, 2009-10 U.S. Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching participant at the Fezeka Senior Secondary School in Guguletu, South Africa 



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    StoryCorps Launches National Teachers Initiative

     | Sep 26, 2011

    StoryCorps, the national non-profit oral history project, launched the National Teachers Initiative on Monday, September 19, 2011. The Initiative celebrates the brilliant and courageous work of public school teachers across the country. By recording, sharing, and preserving their stories, StoryCorps hopes to call public attention to the invaluable contributions teachers have made to this nation, honor those who have embraced the profession as their calling, encourage teaching as a career choice, and unify the country behind its teachers—helping all recognize that there is no more important or noble work than that of educating the nation’s children.

    StoryCorps interview photo by Tony RinaldoThe National Teachers Initiative will partner with local education and community organizations and public school districts across the country to record stories, placing special attention on the work of teachers striving to increase the number of students who graduate prepared for college and careers. StoryCorps will visit cities throughout the country during the 2011-2012 school year to record stories honoring at least 625 teachers. These cities include: Zanesville, Ohio; Portland, Oregon; New York City; Orlando, Florida; Fort Riley, Kansas; Mobile, Alabama; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Baltimore, MD; McComb, Mississippi; and New Orleans, Louisiana. 

    Major funding for the National Teachers Initiative is provided by the Corporation of Public Broadcasting and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, with additional funding provided by The Joyce Foundation. The National Teachers Initiative is part of American Graduate, a public media initiative supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to help local communities across America address the dropout crisis. 

    The mission of StoryCorps is to provide Americans of all backgrounds and beliefs with the opportunity to record, share, and preserve the stories of their lives. They accomplish this by recording high-quality interviews between friends or family, in which one person interviews the other. A trained Facilitator guides the interview, if necessary, and handles all the technical aspects of the recording.

    StoryCorps travels across the country and has collected and archived more than 30,000 interviews from more than 60,000 participants. It is one of the largest oral history projects of its kind. StoryCorps currently has four major initiatives: StoryCorps Historias collects the stories of Latinos throughout the United States and Puerto Rico; StoryCorps Griot preserves the voices and experiences of African Americans; the Memory Loss Initiative reaches out to people affected by memory loss disorders and their families; the September 11th Initiative honors and remembers the stories of survivors, rescue workers, and others most personally affected by the events of September 11, 2001.

    StoryCorps MobileBooth photo

    The first StoryBooth opened on October 23, 2003, in New York City’s Grand Central Terminal. In May 2008 the new flagship StoryBooth opened in Lower Manhattan’s Foley Square. StoryCorps currently operates StoryBooths in New York City, San Francisco, and Atlanta. Two StoryCorps MobileBooths travel across the country, partnering with local public radio stations in various cities for one month at a time. StoryCorps’ first two MobileBooths hit the road May 19, 2005. StoryCorps also provides a Door-to-Door service where trained Facilitators travel with recording equipment to collect stories on-site. More information can be found at Bring StoryCorps to Your Community. StoryCorps participants receive a broadcast-quality copy of their interview on CD at the end of their session. The suggested donation for an hour-long StoryBooth session is $25 ensuring access to everyone. StoryCorps fundraises throughout the year to help cover costs of recording, archiving, and preserving each interview. 

    With the permission of the participants, edited stories from each booth are broadcast on a partner public radio station. One story is broadcast nationally on NPR’s Morning Edition every Friday morning. Recorded interviews are added to the StoryCorps Archive, housed at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress. 

    StoryCorps launched the first National Day of Listening in 2008 to encourage all Americans to record an interview with a loved one on the day after Thanksgiving using equipment that is readily available in most homes—from cell phones to tape recorders to computers or even pen and paper. This year’s National Day of Listening is November 25, 2011. Visit http://storycorps.org for more information. 


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    New Literacies Institute Inspires 21st Century Teacher Leaders

     | Sep 23, 2011

    by Jill Castek

    The Friday Institute at North Carolina State University was the site of the fifth New Literacies Teacher Leader Institute from July 25 to 29, 2011. The event was organized around the theme “Inquire, Collaborate, Create: New Literacies for Teacher Leaders.” NC State professors Hiller Spires, Carl Young, and John Lee, along with other presenters, used innovative instructional techniques to showcase ways that digital tools can create challenging and motivating learning opportunities for teachers and students. 

    Teacher Emily Blair at the New Literacies Teacher Leader Institute at North Carolina State UniversityAcross the week, participants engaged in hands-on, minds-on, project-based inquiries. In the process, they made plans for distributing new knowledge to their extended learning communities in their respective schools and districts.

    Keynote addresses sparked new ideas for implementation. Professor Don Leu’s talk invited a closer look at New Literacies, Inquiry, and Equity:  Teacher Leaders for a New Educational Era. Steven W. Anderson’s address promoted Education, Enduring and Everlasting. Meredith Stewart’s keynote explored Digital Cross Training: Teachers as Students and Students as Teachers

    Digging Deeper sessions encouraged participants to explore how social networking environments can enrich the classroom and how video can be used as a creation tool to amplify student engagement, creativity, and complex thinking. 

    Cool Tools sessions featured Voicethread, Prezi, Xtranormal, Google's Collaborative Literacy Tools and much more. Across the institute, Twitter, and Ning were used as dynamic communication and reflection tools.

    Professor Hiller Spires with Ke Wang, Bing Tan, and teachers from North CarolinaEach day included time for teachers to create innovative inquiry lessons based on curriculum standards. To celebrate and showcase their learning, teachers shared their innovative inquiry projects during a Participant Showcase

    The New Literacies Teacher Leader Institute at NC State was an innovative learning experience that inspired participating teachers to tap students’ curiosity and unleash their creativity while at the same time become agents for change in a new educational era.  Creators Hiller Spires, John Lee, Carl Young, Don Leu, Julie Coiro, and Jill Castek have seen momentum for the institute grow as new generations of teacher leaders share their knowledge with colleagues and put into practice what they’ve learned. Organizers are planning for the next institute in 2012. To get involved contact Hiller Spires at haspires@ncsu.edu.

    Photo Captions: Emily Blair, a New Literacies Teacher Leader and Spanish teacher from Jeffries Grove Elementary School in Raleigh, NC, chooses an image that represents her leadership style.  During Design Studio, Emily worked with Jennifer Smith-Wyatt and Mary Gail Walker to create an instructional unit focused on cultural connections. One of the Institute creators, Professor Hiller Spires, offers support as educators Ke Wang and Bing Tan from Beijing Royal School in China collaborate with teachers from North Carolina to explore Cool Tools for teaching new literacies. In Design Studio, Ke along with fellow math teacher Zhong designed a unit exploring linear correlations with bivariate data

    Jill Castek is from the University of California, Berkeley. 

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

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