MSM 215 This We Believe: Characteristics and Going for a Walk with Dave.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

AMLE Feature:

Characteristics

To comprehend their breadth and focus, the characteristics are grouped in three general categories:
Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Characteristics
●Educators value young adolescents and are prepared to teach them.
●Students and teachers are engaged in active, purposeful learning.
●Curriculum is challenging, exploratory, integrative, and relevant.
●Educators use multiple learning and teaching approaches.
●Varied and ongoing assessments advance learning as well as measure it.
 Leadership and Organization Characteristics
●A shared vision developed by all stakeholders guides every decision.
●Leaders are committed to and knowledgeable about this age group, educational research, and
best practices.
●Leaders demonstrate courage and collaboration.
●Ongoing professional development reflects best educational practices.
●Organizational structures foster purposeful learning and meaningful relationships.
 Culture and Community Characteristics
●The school environment is inviting, safe, inclusive, and supportive of all.
●Every student’s academic and personal development is guided by an adult advocate.
●Comprehensive guidance and support services meet the needs of young adolescents.
●Health and wellness are supported in curricula, school-wide programs, and related policies.
●The school actively involves families in the education of their children.
●The school includes community and business partners.
You can find the This We Believe

Jokes You Can Use:

 A famous lawyer, who had been a public defender for years, dies. He finds himself standing at the back
of an enormous queue outside the gates of Heaven. The queue before him is enormous. The number of
people who die in a single day appalls him. He can barely see St. Peter sitting up on a podium outside the
gates with a large book. Every now and then St. Peter glances down the queue to see how he is going.
Suddenly he catches the eye of the lawyer. He looks very surprised. He jumps down from the podium
and comes running along the line until slightly out of breath he arrives beside the lawyer. He embraces
him. He pulls him out of the queue and motions for him to come to the front of the queue. Another person
questions what is happening and another angel speaks to the person. Word is passed along the queue
and the lawyer is surprised, as people start nodding and clapping. He becomes embarrassed by all the
attention and asks St. Peter why he is getting the special attention.
St. Peter stops suddenly and looks concerned.
“You are a lawyer aren’t you?’
“Yes” the lawyer replies. “Does this happen to all lawyers in heaven?”
“Oh, no, “Said St. Peter. “It’s just you are the first one to ever get here.”

Eileen Award:

●Charles G. Timm
●Jennifer Johnson
●Marianne Mangels
●Jenifer Fox
●Mark Wills

Advisory:

Ten Rules for Class

Middle School Science Minute
by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)
Josh Fullan wrote an article entitled, “Pedestrian City,” for the magazine Green Teacher, summer edition
2012.  The purpose of the article was to present a way that middle school students could investigate the
walkability of their urban neighborhoods.  He presented three activities:
Learning Activity 1:  Introduction to walking as a mode of transportation.
Learning Activity 2:  Experiential lesson on walking in which the teacher leads the students on a
neighborhood walk.
Learning Activity 3:  Culminates the unit with a creative hands-on activity on walking in which students
create a hand-drawn map of a walk they do regularly.
For more information, please visit:
From the Twitterverse:

Russel Tarr @historynews

[History: 1066-1500]: ‘Medieval village’ remains found http://bbc.in/NMuaju
#historyteacher

Scott McLeod @mcleod

RT @ransomtech: School leaders, pls read. MT @mcleod: 26 Internet safety
talking points!  #edtech #cpchat #edchat

Rich Kiker @rkiker

Your Deleted Facebook Photos Will Now Be Gone Forever 

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

Schoolnotes http://goo.gl/IVaUu Place where teachers can make pages for parent
& student viewing #edchat #edtech

Sandy Kendell @EdTechSandyK

iPad Classroom Next Term? – 10 Things to Consider | #mlearning #edtech

Sue Waters @suewaters

50 things to do during Connected Educators Month

russeltarr @russeltarr

Geographers! New on iBooks – great new book by @richardallaway and @GeoBlogs http://j.mp/NtRcel #geographyteacher

russeltarr @russeltarr

How to Address Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom: http://tinyurl.com/3jdczxt

Britt Michaelian @MamaBritt

🙂 “@awakeningaimee: Opportunity may knock only once, but temptation leans on the
doorbell”

russeltarr @russeltarr

Why study History? How to do it? How to write for History? http://tinyurl.com/3tmysml

Kyle Calderwood @kcalderw

5 Edmodo Activities for the First Day of School http://zite.to/RXDnIv #mlearning
#edtech #njed
Join #mschat on Fridays at 8:00 pm EST on Twitter!
Resources:
5 Video Projects to Try With Your Students
Richard Byrne
Here are five ideas and tools for video projects that you can try with your students this year.

ISTE:

Digital Historians

Making History Local, Digital, and Relevant:  The GeoHistorian Project
Kent State University  affliated project.
Mark van’t Hooft and Thomas McNeal
The GeoHistorian Project
    QR Codes and a Mobile Phone
    Funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities
Origins
    We started investigating the use of cell phones for video conferencing in 2005 as an alternative to
something . . .
The Geo Historian Project
    Give students the opportunity to become local historians and create digital resources for their
communities;
    Demonstrate how resource sites near and far (in this case a local historical society and historical sites)
can be valuable learning resources;
    Investigate cell phones as an educational tool outside of the classroom;
    Demonstrate how digital content can be used to amplify learning on location.
Partnerships
    Kent Historical Society
    Research Center for Educational Technology
    Kent City Schools
    Kent State Honors College
    National Endowment for the Humanities
    Kent Parks and Recreation
Creating Digital Stories about Local History
    4 week project, one week for each item listed below:
    1.  The Importance of Stories
    2.  Historical Research
    3.  Story Writing
 Storyboard their research.
    4.  Audio/Video Editing
 Photostory used for story production
 Videos uploaded to YouTube
    5.  Take their digital stories and then create the QR codes for each site.
 The QR codes are machined in aluminum markers.
    Setup as a blog.
    Curriculum Page
 Online and free, but do let them know if you use it.  They’d like to know.
QR or 2D Code is a matrix barcode with embedded information such as text, an email address or phone
number, or a URL (multimedia!!).  The codes can be read by camera phones with a camera
Bar codes come in many shapes and sizes:
    Aztec, QR Code, Sema Code (data matrix), EZ code
    They can come in pictures.
 Mickey mouse, Zebra shape,
QR code generator
    Digital content and a place to upload it to somewhere.
Digital Content Considerations
    Link to existing content or make your own.
    Smart phones from different carries all have different operating systems and require different videos
and audio formats
    Formats for video and audio clips
 Windows mobile
 iPhone/Quicktime
 Android MPeg4
QR Code Generators
    delivr
    3GVision
    snap.vu  www.snap.vu  Requires a registration, but you can track how many views.
Try it Out!
    Any of the QR codes you see here can be scanned.
    Download a QR Code Reader to your phone if you haven’t done so yet:
 Go to www.i-nigma.mobi on your mobile phone.
 i-nigma will automatically identify your handset type.
    Use your phone or iPod Touch to scan the codes to see the embedded content.
The Historical Society made a coloring book of each place and put the QR Code in the book with the
picture for the kids to color.
There are times that audio is better than video for upload/download.  They can make the QR code for text
only/audio only so that it doesn’t require internet access.

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:
●The Ohio Middle Level Association will hold their annual conference.
○OMLA Registration Form
○OMLA Presentation Proposal Form
AMLE Affiliate Conferences:
●The Michigan Association of Middle School Educators Annual Conference is coming up March
2012 in Warren Woods, MI.
○MAMSE Exhibitor Form
○MAMSE Registration Form
○MAMSE Presentation Form
○MAMSE Conference Program Book (2011)
●The North Carolina Middle School Association’s Annual Conference March 13-15, 2012
○Conference Brochure
○Presenter’s Application
○Who They Are . . .
○This year’s sessions . . .
Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.
○Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.

MSM 214: This We Believe to the Stratosphere!

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

AMLE Feature:

This We Believe:

In This We Believe: Keys to Educating Young Adolescents, the Association for Middle Level Education, formerly National Middle School Association, describes the nature of an educational program that reflects what research and vast experience have demonstrated to be best for 10- to 15-year-olds.

Major Goals of Middle Level Educators
To become a fully functioning, self-actualized person, each young adolescent should

  • Become actively aware of the larger world, asking significant and relevant questions about that world and wrestling with big ideas and questions for which there may not be one right answer.
  • Be able to think rationally and critically and express thoughts clearly.
  • Read deeply to independently gather, assess, and interpret information from a variety of sources and read avidly for enjoyment and lifelong learning.
  • Use digital tools to explore, communicate, and collaborate with the world and learn from the rich and varied resources available.
  • Be a good steward of the earth and its resources and a wise and intelligent consumer of the wide array of goods and services available.
  • Understand and use the major concepts, skills, and tools of inquiry in the areas of health and physical education, language arts, world languages, mathematics, natural and physical sciences, and the social sciences.
  • Explore music, art, and careers, and recognize their importance to personal growth and learning.
  • Develop his or her strengths, particular skills, talents, or interests and have an emerging understanding of his or her potential contributions to society and to personal fulfillment.
  • Recognize, articulate, and make responsible, ethical decisions concerning his or her own health and wellness needs.
  • Respect and value the diverse ways people look, speak, think, and act within the immediate community and around the world.
  • Develop the interpersonal and social skills needed to learn, work, and play with others harmoniously and confidently.
  • Assume responsibility for his or her own actions and be cognizant of and ready to accept obligations for the welfare of others.
  • Understand local, national, and global civic responsibilities and demonstrate active citizenship through participation in endeavors that serve and benefit those larger communities.

This I Believe Poster:  http://www.amle.org/AboutAMLE/ThisWeBelieve/ThisIBelieve/tabid/2320/Default.aspx

Jokes You Can Use:

Hear about the gymnast that was disqualified at the Olympics?

On Our Mind:

 

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:  Jennifer Mangler
  • Twitter:  CAMLE,
  • Facebook:  Jennifer Johnson, Marianne Mangels
  • Google+: Zahid Hassan, Andy Winchester
  • iTunes:

Advisory:

Presidential Birthday Gifts:  http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/62717
Why grammar is important- http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/07/i_wont_hire_people_who_use_poo.html
Build a Meerkat http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/activity/build-meerkat/?ar_a=1

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Summer Reading — Back to School
The Summer, 2012 edition of Science Scope, a magazine for middle school science teachers produced by the National Science Teachers Association, featured an article entitled “Book Your Summer Vacation.”  The article was written by Juliana Texley.  In this podcast, the third and final installment in this series, three books are featured.  They include:

  • Snap by Katherine Ramsland

 

  • The Failure of Environmental Education by Charles Saylan and Daniel Blumstein

 

  • Uncovering Student Ideas in Astronomy: 45 New Formative Assessment Probes by Page Keeley

All of these books are available in the NSTA Store:
http://nsta.org/store

From the Twitterverse:

* Erin Klein ‏@KleinErin
Free audio recorder & editor: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ great for podcasting and screen casting #screencastcamp

PLN, check out the Google Doc that #screencastcamp is sharing! Some new tools, that I’ve not seen. 🙂 #edtech #ntchat

Screencasting without worrying about other stuff #fromEvernote https://www.evernote.com/shard/s204/sh/0fac3947-3b80-427d-8b96-a7d3ecf1f666/58959aa559e41416b2e10a4deae85b9c @techsavvyed #screencastcamp

http://www.freesound.org “Flickr for Audio” #screencastcamp

@ScreencastCamp: Good morning screencasters! Watch our feed of sessions today: live from #screencastcamp #ntchat

* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
DangIrrel: The complete teacher vs. what we often have instead #edtech #edtechlead
* RUTH BUZZI ‏@Ruth_A_Buzzi
The disqualified gymnast was asked why she had strapped cats to her feet. She muttered something about purr-fect landings. #HappyCATurday!
* Mental Floss ‏@mental_floss
Today is President Obama’s 51st birthday. Here are some of the strangest gifts presidents have received — http://goo.gl/H5zVd
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
MT @tomwhitby Snapshot of a modern learner #edtech
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
mySchoolNotebook: http://goo.gl/ElUdl Note-taking tool; can include drawings in notes #edchat #edtech #midleved
* Edmodo ‏@edmodo
RT @mrsebiology: An idea I had about using Edmodo for ePortfolios http://goo.gl/fBbrv #edchat #midleved #elemchat
* AMLE ‏@AMLEnews
Help ease their anxiety: Make school logistics easier for your student who is new to middle school #midleved #mschat
* Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574
#Mschat Helps us pick the topic for Aug. 9, 8 pm EST http://twtpoll.com/nhkze6 @AMLEnews @MSMatters #midleveled
* Ron King ‏@mthman
MT@occam98: Nice advice letter from Pixar animator Pete Docter to Middle School Students: http://j.mp/N6Virt #midleved
l AMLE ‏@AMLEnews
Film as a Great Motivator via @edutopia. Also great in #midleved advisory programs

Study shows texting affects grammar skills of middle school students via @educationweek #midleved

* Steven W. Anderson ‏@web20classroom
Looking to try @edmodo? Here are 15 more ideas:
* Brenda Dyck ‏@bdyck
@eyeoneducation: Teach Your Students to Use Social Media: 10 Kids Transforming their World Through Social Media http://bit.ly/OBuD7z
Join #mschat on Fridays at 8:00 pm EST on Twitter!

ISTE:

Stratosphere

Integrating Technology, Pedagogy and Change Knowledge.
By Michael Fullan

Spotlight Speaker.

Orienting Ideas:
• Real examples
• Whole system reform – this is large scale. Minimum is a district.
• Simple. – Simplexity. Small number of things that you need to focus on – less than 10. Complex part is how to make them gel. How to move individuals, groups. Belief, motivation, skills is clarified by doing it.

Focus on capacity building linked to results.

www.michaelfullan.com mfullan@me.com

Debrief:
What is the best insight or idea you got from the session? What question/puzzle is foremost on your mind about the stratosphere agenda?

Stratosphere Defined:
Whole system Reform Opportunities to learn differently – Learning how to learn. Expanding warehouse of information.

Outline:
• Problem
• Solution
• Timeliness
• Innovation Cycle

Intrinsic motivation. What kind of strategies help develop that intrinsic motivation.

Specificity
Clarity
21st century skills. Have been around for a while, but aren’t clearly defined. They film things. Emphasis on FILM.

We need regular schools that get results.

Results:
Writing 44% -78% (Boys (32-74)
Students know what they are doing and why. The students provide consistent responses.

Technology has dramatically affected virtually every sector in society that you can think of except education.

The average performance of systems is not the most important factor; rather the gap between low and high performance is.

Loss of enthusiasm by Grade Level

Worse than being bored is teaching the bored.

There is also a decline in Teacher Satisfaction:
2008- 57
2010 – 44

More teachers are also considering leaving the Profession. Now almost 1 in 3. 55% leave the profession within the first 5 years. Higher in some urban areas. Years of experience = 1 for mode of experience. In other words, most teachers have 1 year of experiences.

Professional capital Human Capital

PISA results:
Even in countries doing well have leveled off in performance.

Technology can help us move forward even more.

Explicit Connection:
• Technology
• Pedagogy
• Change Knowledge

New Learning
• Irresistibly engaging for both students and teachers • Elegantly efficient and easy to use.
• Technologically ubiquitous – 24/7
• Steeped in real-life problem solving

There are some examples, but nothing large scale yet. ITL – Innovative Teaching and Learning
Breakthroughs work from a small number of goals. Technology must be combined with Pedagogy.

Pedagogy and Change
• Roles of the Teacher
• Student Engagement
• Pedagogical Precision

Digital Savvy is NOT Pedagogy.
• Making digital devices available is not necessarily learning.

Effect Size on Student learning
• Teacher as Activator .84
• Teacher as Facilitator .17

Lots of technology wants to bypass the teacher. This is a huge mistake. John Hattie – meta-research. Visible Learning is the book.
Is this a result of training? Are the facilitations being done poorly?

Expert Teachers:
• Know the material
• guide learning
• monitor learning
• attitudinal attributes of learning
• Defensible assessments

A small amount of intervention can have a great difference.
20-30 minutes of supportive adult attention can move a student from the wrong path to the right one. Ben Levin.

Pedagogical
• Treating students as learning partners
• Employing students’ own tools
• Peer to Peer teacher.
• Offering student more choices and fewer mandates.

Technology:
It is time to define the learning game as racing with technology.

What does tech want:
• Efficiency
• Opportunity
• emergence
• complexity
• diversity
• specialization • ubiquity
• freedom
• mutualism
• beauty
• sentience
• structure

The Dark Side: Books as reference:

Net Delusion – The Dark Side of Internet Freedom (Evgency Morozov)
The Filter Bubble (Eli Pariser)
The Shallows

Cyber-utopiaism

If you live in a poor neighborhood, you are far more likely to see a trade school ad than a college ad.

• 8% of teachers fully integrate tech into the classroom.
• 43% of students feel unprepared.
• 23% of teacher feel they could integrate.

Innovative Teaching Practices ITL

• Student centered
• Park Manor Senor Public School – see web site for examples.
• Change knowlege
• Focus
• Innovation
• Empathy
• Give respect before it is earned
• Build relationships
• Capacity Building
• Contagion
• Transparency
• Elimination of non-essentials • Leadership

Strong practice of non-judgementalism.

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

 

MSM 213 More ISTE, Scheduling and Let’s Chat

AMLE Feature:  Scheduling

More on scheduling:

 

Master Time Schedule

6th Grade 7th Grade 8th Grade
A2 8:00-8:15 A2 8:00-8:15 A2  8:00- 8:15
Core 1 (Block) 8:19-9:48  Core 1/ Elective  8:19-9:16  Block 1 (Core) 8:19- 9:50
Core 2  9:52-10:48  Core 1/ Elective  9:20-10:17  (Core)  9:54- 10:48 
Lunch 10:52-11:22 Block 1 (Core 2) 10:21-11:50 Core 3/ Elective  10:52-11:50 
Core 3 (Block) 11:26-12:53  Lunch  11:54-12:24 Core 3/ Elective 11:54-12:52
Core 4 or Elective 12:57-1:54 Block 2 (Core 3)  12:28-1:48 Lunch 12:56-1:21
Core 4 or Elective 1:58-2:55 Core 4 1:52-2:55 Block 2(Core 4) 1:25- 2:55

 

 

2 day Cycle (6th Grade)

Team 6A & 6B

A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:48 Core 1 (Block) Core 2 (Block)
9:52-10:48 Core 2 Core 1
10:52-11:22 Lunch
11:26-12:53 Core 3 (Block) Core 4
12:57-1:54 Core 4 Core 3
1:58-2:55 Elective

 

 

2 day Cycle (6th Grade)

Team 6C & 6D

A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:48 Core1 (Block) Core 2 (Block)
9:52-10:48 Core 2 Core 1
10:52-11:22 Lunch
11:26-12:53 Core 3 (Block) Core 4 (Block)
12:57-1:54 Elective
1:58-2:55 Core 4 Core 3

 

 

2 day Cycle (7th Grade)

Team 7A

A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:16 Elective
9:20-10:17 Core 1 Core 2
10:21-11:50 Block 1 (Core 2) Block 3 (Core 1)
11:54-12:24 Lunch
12:28-1:48 Block 2 (Core 3) Block 4 (Core 4) 
1:52-2:55 Core 4 Core 3

Team 7B

A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:16 Core 1 Core 2
9:20-10:17 Elective
10:21-11:50 Block 1 (Core 2) Block 3 (Core 1)
11:54-12:24 Lunch
12:28-1:48       Block 2 (Core 3) Block 4 (Core 4) 
1:52-2:55 Core 4 Core 3

Team 8A

A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:50 Block 1 (Core 1) Block 3 (Core 2)
9:54-10:48 Core 2 Core 1
10:52-11:50 Elective
11:54-12:52 Core 3 Core 4
12:56-1:21 Lunch
1:25-2:55 Block 2 (Core 4) Block 4 (Core 3)

Team 8B

 A B
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:50 Block 1 (Core 1) Block 3 (Core 2)
9:54-10:48 Core 2 Core 1
10:52-11:50 Core 3 Core 4
11:54-12:52 Elective
12:56-1:21 Lunch
1:25-2:55 Block 2 (Core 4) Core 3

Electives are semester based

Electives
8:00-8:15 A2
8:19-9:16 7th A
9:20-10:17 7B
10:21-10:51 Lunch
10:55-11:52 8A
11:56-12:53 8B
12:57-1:54 6A
1:58-2:55 6B

 

Lunch
Elective Teachers 10:21-10:51 
6th Grade 10:52-11:22
7th Grade 11:57-12:27 
8th Grade  12:57-1:27

6th Grade Example by Teacher (*Note that there usually is a first column containing teacher names.)

8:00-8:15 8:19-9:48 9:52-11:21 11:25-11:50 11:54-12:52 12:56-1:54 1:58-2:55
Room # 6th Grade A2 Core Core Lunch Core Core 4 or Elective Core 4 or Elective
Team Day A2 Block 1 Block 2 Core 3
103 A A 999600-01 Western Hem. 200600-01 Sci 300600-01 Sci 300600-02 Sci 300600-03 Prep
B Sci 300600-02 Sci 300600-03 Western Hem. 200600-01 Sci 300600-01
101 A A 999600-02 Western Hem. 200600-02 LA 100600-01 LA 100600-02 LA 100600-03 Prep
B LA 100600-02 LA 100600-03 Western Hem. 200600-02 LA 100600-01
100 A A Western Hem. 200600-03 Math 400600-01 Math 400600-02 Math 400600-03
B Math 400600-02 Math 400600-03 Western Hem. 200600-03 Math 400600-01
102 A A 999600-03 SS-ELL ELL-Math –  LA-ELL ELL-Sci-
B LA-ELL ELL-Sci- SS-ELL ELL-Math 
107 B A 999600-06 Math 400600-03 Math 400600-04 Sci 300600-03 Sci 300600-04 Prep
B Sci 300600-03 Sci 300600-04 Math 400600-03 Math 400600-04
106 B A 999600-07 Western Hem. 200600-07 Western Hem. 200600-08 LA 100600-04 LA 100600-05 Prep
B LA 100600-04 LA 100600-05 Western Hem. 200600-07 Western Hem. 200600-08
105 C A 999600-08 LA 100600-04 Sci 300600-XX Sci 300600-04 Prep Sci 300600-05
B Sci 300600-04 Sci 300600-05 LA 100600-04 Sci 300600-XX
104 C A 999600-09 Western Hem. 200600-04 Math 400600-xx Math 400600-04 Prep Math 400600-05
B Math 400600-04 Math 400600-05 Western Hem. 200600-04 Math 400600-xx
108 C A Western Hem. 200600-XX Western Hem. 200600-XX LA 100600-XX LA 100600-XX
B LA 100600-XX LA 100600-XX Western Hem. 200600-XX Western Hem. 200600-XX
113 D A 999600-04 LA 100600-XX LA 100600-XX Math 400600-XX Prep Math 400600-XX
B Math 400600-XX Math 400600-XX LA 100600-XX LA 100600-XX
112 D A 999600-05 Sci 300600-09 Western Hem. 200600-07 Sci 300600-06 Prep Sci 300600-07
B Sci 300600-06 Sci 300600-07 Sci 300600-09 Western Hem. 200600-07

 

Jokes You Can Use: 

This girl said she recognized me from the vegetarian club, but I’d never met herbivore.

What do you call a dinosaur with an extensive vocabulary? A thesaurus.

On Our Mind:  

#mschat restart on Twitter August 9 – 8:00 pm EST  (Todd Bloch)

 

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:  Jennifer Mangler
  • Twitter:  National History Bee, Electric Eggplant, Toshiba Innovation, Scott Newcomb, Bethany Beaudrie, Professor Michael Mills, the Doceri Team, Sandra Wozniak, Ellie Dix, Haikuary, Round Lake Middle, Scott Ziegler, Present Me, and Kyle Pekurney.
  • Facebook:  Stacy Nichols Belson,
  • iTunes:  No new follows this week.

Advisory:

Fictitious Dishes:

 

http://www.dinahfried.com/fictitious-dishes/

 

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

Summer Reading Through Time and Space

 

The Summer, 2012 edition of Science Scope, a magazine for middle school science teachers produced by the National Science Teachers Association, featured an article entitled “Book Your Summer Vacation.”  The article was written by Juliana Texley. This is the second in a three part series of podcasts, on this article.  In this podcast, three  more books are featured.  They include:

 

Billions of Years, Amazing Changes: The Sory of Evorution, by Laurence Pringle

 

Mission Control: This is Apollo, by Andrew Chalkin

 

Space, Stars, and the Beginning of Time, by Elaine Scott

 

All of these books are available in the NSTA Store:

http://nsta.org/store

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Miss Noor ㋡ @missnoor28

RT @BrunoELT: “@tomwhitby: This has been RTed many times “The Hierarchy of
Professional Development Needs” http://vsb.li/BG3DBd#Edchat”

Mark Barnes @markbarnes19

Today’s Resources On The Olympics – I’m not anticipating posting daily updates now
on the Olympics, since The Best S…  ow.ly/1lHalS

Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher

*** Announcing! Flat Classroom Certified Teacher Course – 2012-2013 schedule
vsb.li/RYJMpg

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

Turn “Grading” into “Analysis and Reaction”
Can Kids Be Taught Persistence? http://goo.gl/tyv9Z #edchat

Eye On Education @eyeoneducation

5 Ways Apple’s Culture Can Improve YOUR Classroomhttp://bit.ly/Nrxu6I
@edudemic #edchat #teaching #ntchat

Diane Ravitch @DianeRavitch

What Michelle Rhee Told the British Education Ministerhttp://wp.me/p2odLa-13z via
@wordpressdotcom

David Andrade @daveandcori

Free Project Based Learning Resources from Edutopiahttp://bit.ly/GzFqLN #BYOTchat
#PBL #edchat

Chris ONeal @onealchris

I will begin playing these sound effects, as appropriate, during future meetings
www.instantchan.com

Erin Klein @KleinErin

Back to School Tech Gadgets!
http://www.kleinspiration.com/2012/07/back-to-school-tech-gadgets.html

Sabrina Stevens @TeacherSabrina

NOOOOOO!!!!! “Say Goodbye to ‘Weekly Reader'” (children’s magazine closes) – via
@TheAtlanticWire http://bit.ly/NGFxtv #edchat#journchat

Ian Jukes @ijukes

4 Online Infographics Generators bit.ly/SxZMeR

Miss Noor ㋡ @missnoor28

RT @enginstructor: 10 Free Text to Speech Tools for Educatorshttp://vsb.li/LSGZ3f
#edchat #edtech #tools

Scott McLeod @mcleod

@mcleodreads: A Submarine Captain On The Power Of Leadership Language
http://bit.ly/PILGHD  #suptchat #edadmin #satchat
August 9th is the restart for #midleved (now #mschat) on Twitter.  Join up starting at 8:00
pm Eastern Standard Time.

 

ISTE:

Social Media

See mightybell link.

https://mightybell.com/spaces/3e577dc0c5b498a7

 

Positive emotions prior to a test increase cognitive performance.

 

Provide students with opportunities to communicate.

 

We need to teach this to students from the get go.

 

Making connections with real world.

 

Show and Tell. This is the most advanced presentation that you can do.

  • Defines the
  • Unwritten rules in Show/Tell.
  • Until we’ve mastered Show/Tell, we can’t be very effective on-line.

 

Take happiness as seriously as we take test scores. Zappos. They don’t sell shoes, they deliver happiness.

 

How many of your teachers do you remember?

Which ones do you remember?

 

Touchy feely is not a nicety. Brain research shows that you don’t get learning without it.

 

Social-Emotional is about performance. It is about energy.

 

Misiko Ito did research on social context.

 

What does in “feel” like for students in your school?

Do teachers know?

Can we do something about this?

 

 

ISTE 2012

Using iPads in the Classroom Edubloggercon/SocialEdCon session.  

Brad Flickinger hosting.

 

What are people using in their classrooms>

Open mic time

Wanted the iPads as a tool not as a thing to learn in itself.

App Craft:  Kids creating apps and animations for other kids to use.

The free version has a lot of Japanese commercials.

 

Penguin Palooza on wikispaces.com

apps were the tacky/techie? books.

Smithsonian institute book on penguins.

Penguin app that hooks up with an aquarium in Calif.

Consumer apps:  used apps.

Producer apps:  created content with the app.

Comic Creator, etc.  Digital Storytelling.

 

Use teleprompter software and sandwich two iPads together.

Use it with English Language Learners.

Prompterous:  teleprompter software.

Collabaracam: combine 4 different iphones or ipads to one.

One person becomes the director and then combine the feeds on one device.

http://collabracam.com/

 

Animation

Puppet pals

Animate on the fly.  Use it with kids to do digital storytelling.

Toontastic

Animating in real time.

Facejack:  Does the same thing as Blabberize.

Stopmotion Animation

iStopmotion

Stopmotion Pro

Smoovie

Scott Meech

Stopmotion Studio

 

QR Code Scavenger Hunts.

Putting QR codes next to teacher names as a way to connect with teachers and content.

 

Green Screens

Action Movie app.

 

Music creation with the iPad

Google easy chords for the song.

iPad Band . . . hehehe

Give the kids a chance and they’ll go for it like nobody’s business.

Kids learn on the virtual instrument and it leads to the real instrument.

 

Assessories

iRig

 

Teaching with one

App:  Reflection

reflectionapp.com

Air Parrot:  mirror your MacBook.

Use Reflections and put an iPEVO next to the computer and then you can show your fingers touching the screen.

Stylus:  Just mobile

An allupen . . . ?

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:  

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:  

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 212: ISTE Redux, Redux (or Take 2!)

AMLE Feature: Scheduling

Scheduling:
Key Principles:

  • There are two drivers to the schedule: bus and lunch.
  • Everything else can be adjusted. Don’t be locked into “this is how we’ve always done it”.
  • Decide what you want to “solve”. There is no perfect schedule.
  • Look at multiple days.

Prep for teachers to move to a new schedule?
Routine?

AMLE Resource:

  1. http://www.amle.org/Publications/OnTarget/BlockScheduling/tabid/296/Default.aspx
  2. http://www.amle.org/portals/0/pdf/publications/On_Target/scheduling/scheduling_5.pdf
  3. Research Rationale:  http://www.amle.org/Research/ResearchSummaries/FlexibleScheduling/tabid/1140/Default.aspx

Can’t access some of the articles on AMLE?  Become a member!
Contact:  middleschooleducators@gmail.com

Jokes You Can Use:

Puns:

  • How does Moses make his tea? Hebrews it.
  • I changed my iPod’s name to Titanic. It’s syncing now.
  • I know a guy who’s addicted to brake fluid. He says he can stop any time.

Middle School Chemistry Theme Song (this one’s for Dave):

  • Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Sodium-Batman!

On Our Mind:

Highland Park Public Schools Sued:  

http://t.co/UylIRygp

81,904 4th graders (note: number is the entire state of MI, not just Highland Park) still not proficient in Reading.  (Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2012)


David Gornto- Nice work. Let us know how the kids react.

Thought about using Google Docs for your script then copy/paste into your blog as a transcript?  Up for screencasting like Camtasia?  Me either.  Not yet.


Eileen Award:


  • Scoopit:  Jennifer Mangler
  • Twitter:  Valia Reinsalu, Pora Ora,
  • Facebook:  Jennifer McAvoy-Anteau (liked a link on FB)
  • iTunes:

Advisory:

The 11 Ways That Consumers Are Hopeless at Math

This is your brain on shopping, and it’s not very smart.
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/07/the-11-ways-that-consumers-are-hopeless-at-math/259479/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

The Summer, 2012 edition of Science Scope, a magazine for middle school science teachers produced by the National Science Teachers Association, featured an article entitled “Book Your Summer Vacation.”  The article was written by Juliana Texley.  In this podcast, three books from the article are featured.  They include:
Stories in Stone: Travels Through Urban Geology, by David B. Williams
The Visitor’s Guide to American Gardens, by Jo Ellen Meyers Sharp
Concrete Planet, by Robert Courland
All of the books can be found at:
http://nsta.org/store

From the Twitterverse:

* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
Two Thirds of New Mobile Buyers Now Opting For Smartphones | Nielsen Wire Implications for #edtech!
* Stephanie Sandifer ‏@ssandifer
Lecture As Content Delivery Is Dead | The Thinking Stick | @scoopit
* HP Teacher Exchange ‏@HPTeachExchange
Is the Cell Phone the New Pencil? #k12 #education
* Miguel Guhlin ‏@mguhlin
How I’m Using My iPad in a Classroom of 30 StudentSample http://dlvr.it/1rVbxm
* Cheryl Lykowski ‏@CLykowski
Web 2.0 for the Under 13s crowd http://zite.to/KVBztA via @zite
* Tim Wilhelmus ‏@twilhelmus
Tools for Building your PLN http://www.livebinders.com/play/play_or_edit/207036 #EVSCREV12
* Will Richardson ‏@willrich45
Thinking: The central question is no longer “Why do we need schools?” It’s “Why do we WANT schools?”
* Vicki Davis ‏@coolcatteacher
URGENT: Check to see if your email was leaked here, if so change password NOW! http://vsb.li/Gl2KAX #edchat
* CAMLE ‏@camlecolorado
Persuasive Writing is a Key Focus in Common Core Standards http://www.edutopia.org/blog/common-core-standards-persuasive-writing-heather-wolpert-gawron #midleved
* TeacherVision ‏@TeacherVision
Did you get today’s FREE creative writing printable about time travel and ancient Rome? Happy #FreebieFriday. #midleved
5 Jul Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
Curriculum Applications for Podcasting: http://goo.gl/EMshO #edchat #edtech #midleved #elemchat

Ideas for Podcasting in the Classroom: http://goo.gl/v9oyX #edchat #edtech #midleved #elemchat

* Kris Nielsen ‏@klnielsen74
This series is complete, albeit out of order. Whatcha think? What Middle School Students Need From Us http://mgmfocus.com/category/what-they-need-from-us-series/ #midleved #edchat
* Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod
New bookmark: Differentiating Instruction Through Interactive Games

DangIrrel: Want students to be more creative and innovative? Give them the gift of time. [VIDEO] #edtech #edtechlead

* Ginger Lewman ‏@GingerLewman
My newest livebinder: Apps for the PBL Classroom http://www.livebinders.com/play/play_or_edit/444394 #PBLchat #nagc #confratute
* P. F. Anderson ‏@pfanderson
SecondLife competitor Blue Mars drops PC development for Apple’s iOS http://massively.joystiq.com/2011/01/16/second-life-competitor-blue-mars-drops-pc-development-for-apple/ #vw

ISTE:

iPad Flipped Classroom:
Troy’s notes from ISTE.

Half-Baked Idea:

A “school only” cell phone
Ingredients:
1.  Cheap cell phone (www.pandawill.com & cheapest available at this posting:  F8 Quad Band Phone Dual SIM)
2.  Google phone number and app
3.  Optional:  Pay-As-You-Go card (H20)  

Web Spotlight:


Homograph/Homophone Venn Diagram

If, like me, you have difficulty remembering the difference between homophones,homographs, homonyms, heterographs, and heteronyms, you should find this WikipediaVenn diagram useful.
http://www.englishblog.com/2012/07/homographhomophone-venn-diagram.html

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:




AMLE Affiliate Conferences:




Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.


MSM 210: What’s Wrong With The Teenage Mind . . . ?

 AMLE Feature:

No specific AMLE Feature this week. Look for more to come.

Jokes You Can Use:

Boss: I’ve noticed that you go out and get your haircut during work hours.

Employee: It grows during work hours.

Boss: It also grows during non-work hours.

Employee: I didn’t get it all cut.

 

What did the leftovers say when put into the freezer?

Foiled again.

 

What’s another name for a nursery?

Bawlroom.

 

Eileen Award:

 

  • Annie Murphy Paul
  • Alise Herrara
  • Joe Webb
  • Sara Davenport Sisk

Advisory:

World of Coins

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/09/a-world-map-made-of-the-worlds-coins/

 

Food Tweeting Around the World

http://foodmood.in/

Challenges

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/11/10-bets-youll-always-win-unless-the-other-bettor-has-seen-this-video-too/

 

Fun with Visual Charades and Narrated Slideshows Based on Fairy Tales

In their recently published article, “Five-Picture Charades: A Flexible Model for Technology Training in Digital Media Tools and Teaching Strategies,” in the journal Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, Curby Alexander and Tom Hammond present a persuasive case for using “visual charades” as a learning activity with students involving media and creativity.

http://www.speedofcreativity.org/2012/06/06/fun-with-visual-charades-and-narrated-slideshows-based-on-fairy-tales-edtech4u/

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

In the Spring Edition of “Green Teacher,” Emily Harris wrote an article entitled, “Fostering Students’ Water Wisdom.”  The purpose of the article was to bring water awareness into the classroom and contribute to a better global future.

 

She says that teachers play a vital role in helping foster an early appreciation of this most precious resource.  For this reason, WaterCan developed curriculum resources in both English and French which can be freely downloaded from the “Water Wisdom Portal” at:

http://www.watercan.com/students

 

She then goes on to share one of her favorite lesson plans for 7th – 8th grade students, entitled “Water Around the World.”  This class project introduces students to water usage, and to data gathering and analysis.

 

Dave’s Water Cycle Song:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yw275056JtA

 

Hey Dave, what do you think about this?  

“Voyager 1 Spaceship to Break Out of Solar System, Into Outer Spacehttp://abcn.ws/N0eYA8”  

From the Twitterverse:

Stephanie Sandifer @ssandifer

#ISTE12 Daily #edtech is out! http://bit.ly/irlKEQ ▸ Top stories today via
@MfgStories @TinaKotlarek

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

CoboCards: http://goo.gl/izGkb Free online flashcard making site #edchat #edtech
#elearning

Jerry Blumengarten @cybraryman1

My Parent Involvement – Engagement sites: http://tinyurl.com/48yvpey #Satchat

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

Infogram: http://goo.gl/ZO4xJ Web tool to create infographics #edchat #edtech
#elearning

Diane Ravitch @DianeRavitch

Why do some school districts have to be reformed and saved again and again?
http://dianeravitch.net/2012/05/18/289/

tomshepp @tomshepp

21 Map Creation Tools for Students and Teachers http://flpbd.it/P5apj #edtech
#elearning

Mental Floss @mental_floss

25 Brand Names People Incorrectly Use as Generic Terms — http://goo.gl/edBLf

CharlieTravers 4‏@TimeTravel

Great free education resources on #Myresourcecloud http://www.myresourcecloud.net
#edtools #edchat #elt #esl #homeschool

ninok eyiz @eyizibra

“@DianeRavitch: Student test scores are not a measure of great teachers. Unless you are
a Pearson stockholder. #greatteachers” #fb

Lucy Gray @elemenous

Checking out “For ISTE Attendees: Global Education Summit Update” http://ning.it/Nvex3b
#globaled12

Brenda Dyck @bdyck

Very worth reading: A Memorial Day Lesson in Citizenship
http://speedchange.blogspot.ca/2012/05/memorial-day-lesson-in-citizenship.html?m=1
@drcarlapeck

Ian Jukes @ijukes

Job Outlook and Starting Salaries for New Grads http://bit.ly/NuYSAU

ABC News @ABC

13 Hidden Airline Rules http://abcn.ws/MEMgAH

Smhearty @Smhearty

Report: Apple Prepping Separate Podcast App — AppAdvice http://zite.to/KAmdR0 via
@zite

Same3Guys.com @Same3Guys

Apple launching Podcast app with iOS 6 http://ow.ly/bCBaQ Is this good or bad for podcast
creators?

 News:

Thompson: The Humiliation Of High-Stakes Standardized Testing

Virtually all of my students volunteered accounts of the testing indignities that have been dumped on them, but I am particularly haunted by Jeremy, as I will call him.  This brilliant Native American gave into depression when stakes were attached to weekly benchmark assessments, meaning that half of class time was lost to testing.  In my non-tested class, Jeremy would periodically wave a standardized math or English test that he was supposed to have turned in for a grade.  “This is what they think of us,” he would moan. Like nearly 40%  of that semester’s sophomores, Jeremy dropped out was driven out by the test prep which drove out teaching and learning.

http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2012/06/thompson-pearson-anti-testing-rally-illuminates-the-essence-of-bubble-in-testing.html 

Future Shock

I’ll have more to say on the iPad later but one can’t help being struck by the volume and vehemence of apparently technologically sophisticated people inveighing against the iPad.

http://speirs.org/blog/2010/1/29/future-shock.html

 

Computers Grade Essays Fast … But Not Always Well

by MOLLY BLOOM

 

Imagine a school where every child gets instant, personalized writing help for a fraction of the cost of hiring a human teacher — and where a computer, not a person, grades a student’s essays.

Perelman says any student who can read can be taught to score very highly on a machine-graded test.

Shermis ran the Gettysburg Address through one of the earlier-generation computer grading programs, one usually used to evaluate the writing abilities of college freshmen.

Suffice it to say, Abe did not ace the test.

The computer graders he uses give students instant feedback on every draft. Pence says there’s no way he and his red teacher’s pen could do that. And quicker responses, he says, lead to more writing.

“The quantity drives the quality up,” Pence says. “It’s kind of the old bicycle thing — the best way to learn how to ride a bicycle is to ride a bicycle. And the best way to get better at writing is to write and receive consistent, timely feedback.”

http://www.npr.org/2012/06/07/154452475/computers-grade-essays-fast-but-not-always-well?ft=1&f=1019

 

What’s Wrong With the Teenage Mind?

 

“What was he thinking?” It’s the familiar cry of bewildered parents trying to understand why their teenagers act the way they do.

How does the boy who can thoughtfully explain the reasons never to drink and drive end up in a drunken crash? Why does the girl who knows all about birth control find herself pregnant by a boy she doesn’t even like? What happened to the gifted, imaginative child who excelled through high school but then dropped out of college, drifted from job to job and now lives in his parents’ basement?

What happens when children reach puberty earlier and adulthood later? The answer is: a good deal of teenage weirdness.

Becoming an adult means leaving the world of your parents and starting to make your way toward the future that you will share with your peers. Puberty not only turns on the motivational and emotional system with new force, it also turns it away from the family and toward the world of equals.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203806504577181351486558984.html

 

Tools:

Quipper

Quipper produces entertaining and educational quiz apps. We also allows users to create their own apps! Also available on iOS and Android.

http://www.quipper.com/ 

 

Go Class

GoClass is a teaching application for tablet devices that redefines the boundaries of computing in the classroom. Connect with your students like never before, customize and fine-tune your lesson plans on the fly, engage students in new ways and continuously evaluate their understanding while you are in class.

By enriching existing methodologies – rather than replacing them – GoClass empowers you to build on your teaching experience while engaging students in a 21st century learning environment.

*NOTE: They have rights to all materials. 

http://www.goclass.com/guestapp/index.aspx 

Resources:

50 Summer Learning Activities for Kids

Common Sense Media has produced a 16 page guide to summer learning activities.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/06/50-summer-learning-activities-for-kids.html

 

 Summer Reading List

Summer, with its steady supply of barbecues, picnics, parties, and other heavy doses of sociality, makes the need for a well-timed antidote of solitude more urgent than any other season, and what better solitary escape than a good book? It’s time for the annual Brain Pickings summer reading list for cognitive sunshine. Gathered here, in no particular order, are 10 recent and forthcoming books to infuse your season’s well-measured you-moments with a wealth of cross-disciplinary stimulation.

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/06/11/summer-reading-list-2012/

Web Spotlight:

TIMMS/PISA vs. Entrepreneural Spirit:  

http://zhaolearning.com/2012/06/06/test-scores-vs-entrepreneurship-pisa-timss-and-confidence/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 209: AMLE Feature Presentation . . . Popcorn Please!

AMLE Feature:

Today, join us for a interview with Todd Williamson. Director of Technology and Science for Carteret County Schools, MiddleTalk contributor, and NCMSA Technology Specialist.

  • Science Experiment
  • Tech-in-20 Series
  • Math and Science Portal
  • ISTE?

Jokes You Can Use:

Sign in a business:

 We understand that your phone call is important. 

So, we will not interrupt by serving you when you are on the phone. 

 

  RUTH BUZZI ‏@Ruth_A_Buzzi

Cats inherently dislike water. That explains why so many turn to alcohol. #HappyCATurday

 

On Our Mind:  

Eileen Award:   

  • Facebook:  Julie Smith Flack
  • Twitter:  John Winsor, US School Counselors, Microsoft TeachTec
  • Special Guest:  Todd Williamson

Advisory:

How big is your city?

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/07/how-big-is-l-a-at-least-8-other-major-u-s-cities-could-fit-inside-it/

 

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

In the Spring Edition of “Green Teacher,” Emily Harris wrote an article entitled, “Fostering Students’ Water Wisdom.”  The purpose of the article was to bring water awareness into the classroom and contribute to a better global future.

She says that teachers play a vital role in helping foster an early appreciation of this most precious resource.  For this reason, WaterCan developed curriculum resources in both English and French which can be freely downloaded from the “Water Wisdom Portal” at:

http://www.watercan.com/students

 

She then goes on to share one of her favorite lesson plans for 5th – 6th grade students, entitled “Water Alive!”  This is a research based activity designed to help generate an understanding about the universal dependence on water, through the “eyes” of an African animal.

 

From the Twitterverse:

Jerry Blumengarten @cybraryman1

My Organization pages: http://tinyurl.com/4u2ku8m Many teachers need help being
better organized. #SATchat
Admins: Never lose sight of the fact of how hard it is to be in the classroom & all that
teachers have to deal with. Support #satchat

Scott McLeod @mcleod

Use Technology to Upend Traditional Classrooms http://bit.ly/MrVUuu #edtech
Deming: Vast majority of problems we have with individual employees are attributable
to the work systems in which they’re embedded #satchat
RT @mandery: A1 Ineffective teachers teach in isolation. #satchat
a. Lack of effective feedback loops (from ‘above’ & ‘below’) contributes to teacher
ineffectiveness #satchat
b. Failure of systems to articulate/implement new vision of learning/teaching also
contributes to teacher ineffectiveness #satchat
New bookmark: Redefining Instruction With Technology: Five Essential Steps
http://bit.ly/LcUzGN

pammoran @pammoran

Irish kids get diff kind of state exam than US kids- thinking & writing analytically abt
geography – not MC items http://j.mp/KVjlfl

Tweeter of Wit @TweeterofWit

“@sccenglish: Choosing your summer reading: a flowchart from @Teachdotcom –
http://www.sccenglish.ie/2012/06/summer-reading-flowchart.html”

Sirius @ButSiriuslyFlks

@TeacherSabrina I feel I was a better teacher 10 years ago when I had creative
freedom. Now, I’m a skill-and-drill teacher b/c I have to be.

Miguel Guhlin @mguhlin

iPaddiction: 8 Burning Questions About iPads in Class (Answered!)
http://dlvr.it/1hWFrq

jennyluca @jennyluca

“@rgesthuizen: Sad when we don’t know how hard it is to be a teacher today. Good article
TheAge
http://m.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/baillieu-has-no-idea-how-teachers-work-20120605-1
zu5x.html @NedManning’s article

TenMarks Education @TenMarks

What I Wish I’d Done Before Deploying iPads to 735 Middle Schoolers, Pt 2
http://bit.ly/KlOcix via @tericeschneider #tichat #edchat #5thchat

John Norton @middleweb

We’re about to launch the new MiddleWeb. Get a sneak peek & find out about the great
content. http://bit.ly/LaghJ1 #midleved #elemchat @amle
What’s new on the site? “ . . . [O]ur launch will include original pieces by Rick Wormeli,
Nancy Flanagan, Jose Vilson, Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach, Chris Toy, Marsha Ratzel, Elena
Aguilar, Bill Ivey and other insightful middle grades minds.”

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

What a zero really says by @cherraolthof: http://goo.gl/iV3rT #edchat #midleved

News:

 

Teacher tenure: a Fairfax schools firing case

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/teacher-tenure-a-fairfax-schools-firing-case/2012/06/02/gJQAVt4l9U_story.html 

 

Resources:

 

KanBan2Go

kanban2go is an ‘app’ that can help you get work done by organizing your tasks in simple notes on a Kanban board. You can access kanban2go via your browser through most Internet connected devices – PCs, Macs, iPads, Android tablets, Windows tablets, iPhones, Android phones and Windows phones.

It is free for now. We haven’t figured out what to charge you yet :). Don’t worry. We’ll give you at least a 30 day notice if we decide to charge you a small sum to keep the lights on. And you have the option to take your data with you anytime you want to cancel your account.

https://kanban2go.com/

 

ScrollKit

A website builder that works more like drawing. No coding required.

https://www.scrollkit.com/

Web Spotlight:

The Greatest Teacher I Had in College

by Vicki Davis

I will never forget my meanest, toughest professor:Dr. Phil Adler at Georgia Tech. Everyone knew that he was hard. He taught Socratically (by asking questions)and his track record was the best.

http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/06/greatest-teacher-i-had-in-college.html

 

BookType

Write, collaborate, publish.

Booktype is a free, open source platform that allows organisations and communities to produce beautiful, engaging books formatted for print, Amazon, iBooks and almost any ereader within minutes.

Use collaborative editing, live chat and messaging tools to engage proofreaders, editors and contributors and keep track through individual book histories, versions, clones, editing permissions and license management.

Booktype’s powerful, quick output to pdf, epub, mobi, odt and html will export books ready for Amazon, iBooks, Lulu.com and other print-on-demand or ebook stores. Build a community around your content with social tools and use the reach of mobile, tablet and ebook technology to engage new audiences.

Booktype is installed and hosted on your server so all content belongs to you. Not only can you give any book any license you wish, but you are free to distribute where and how you wish without restriction. No platform or data lock-in, no hidden fees, no sneaky reselling costs, no restrictive service agreements.

Booktype does not require you to transfer any of your content rights to Sourcefabric. It’s your content, not ours. Booktype does not make revenues from your content through any sales. it’s your money not ours. Total publishing choice, total publishing control.

You can use Booktype in a closed business environment for the production of inhouse materials, online for the production of open educational resources, or on the ‘open web’ for community based production – and any point in between.

Booktype’s use cases extend far and beyond the selling of books. It allows organisations of all sizes to use books to open up new revenue streams and reach new audiences through education, documentation, promotion and content reuse.

http://www.sourcefabric.org/en/booktype/

 

4 Great & Free Museum Apps to Teach your Students (or to simply enjoy!)

If you want to learn about art through the centuries, there is probably no better place than one of the great museums. But of course, if you are not living in Paris, London, New York you need to travel and you rarely have an excibition that brings together all great masterpieces of a certain artist.

Well, the next best thing might be one (or all) of the free apps below and visit the museum on a virtual trip.

http://www.edukwest.com/4-great-free-museum-apps-to-teach-your-students-or-to-simply-enjoy/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 208 Pushing the Button

Jokes You Can Use:  

RUTH BUZZI ‏@Ruth_A_Buzzi
Our cat ate a neighbor’s canary this morning; his favorite breakfast is Shredded Tweet. #HappyCATurday
RUTH BUZZI ‏@Ruth_A_Buzzi
People who steal cats are not cat burglars; they’re purr-snatchers. #HappyCATurday
RUTH BUZZI ‏@Ruth_A_Buzzi
You can’t stand puns and you hate cat jokes? You gotta be kitten me. #HappyCATurday

On Our Mind:

Eileen Award:

  • Dr. Monte Tatom, FunDave:  Twitter
  • Curtis Fuller:  email
  • Carol DenOtter:  Facebook

Advisory:

32 Innovations that will change the world

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/06/03/magazine/innovations-issue.html

Where kids sleep or A Girl and her room:

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/05/30/a-girl-and-her-room-rania-matar/
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2011/08/08/where-children-sleep-james-mollison/

The New (AB)Normal:

Big portion sizes have become the new abnormal, and it’s time to scale back.
http://makinghealtheasier.org/newabnormal

Liter of Light

http://isanglitrongliwanag.org/

Effect of Sunlight

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/01/what-the-sun-did-to-the-face-of-a-veteran-truck-driver/

How to be Kind:

http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/06/10-inexpensive-ways-to-be-kind.html

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

In the April/May, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, there is an article entitled, “More Than Just Guessing: The Difference Between Prediction and Hypothesis,” written by Michelle Scribner-MacLean.
The topic of the article is to help teachers and students understand the difference between the two terms.  Knowing the difference between making a prediction and formulating a hypothesis can go a long way toward helping students develop scientific literacy.

From the Twitterverse:

* Chris Christensen ‏@christensen143
8 iOS Apps for the Hearing Impaired | Mac|Life #spedchat #ipaded
* Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
In case u missed it “Several Ways to Connect With Disengaged Students”

“Twilight Of The Lecture”

New additions to “The Best Sites To Practice Speaking English”

* Will Richardson ‏@willrich45
I’m stunned by how many educators are willing to embrace the Common Core w/o even a question as to their efficacy. #justsayin
* Rich Kiker ‏@rkiker
How Teachers Make Cell Phones Work in the Classroom
* Kelly Hines ‏@kellyhines
I love it when my morning email from my calendar says “You have no events scheduled for today”
* Gary Johnston ‏@GaryJohnston1
How to make flipped lessons meaningful. I’ll link some video examples next year. http://teachingaheadofthecurve.blogspot.com/2012/06/making-flipped-lessons-meaningful.html
* DeeAnna Nagel ‏@TherapyOnline
Using Laptops at Conference – useful or irritating? Join the discussion! http://brev.is/hPy2
* Luann Lee ‏@stardiverr
Burning mine. RT @nancyflanagan School dist. outside Philly decides to force teachers w/ PhDs to work part-time:http://tinyurl.com/77ww8vy

@stardiverr @nancyflanagan You know our society is really going down fast when teachers must now hide the fact that they are highly educated
laflin ‏@Zach_NxNW
@stardiverr That makes sense. Make the more educated teachers work less!

* Times Education ‏@TimesEducation
Social mobility tsar demands new curbs on private schools http://thetim.es/Mghowj
* Rich Kiker ‏@rkiker
Illiteracy in America: INFOGRAPHIC #edchat
* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch
Long Arm of Federal Control Reaches Districts http://wp.me/p2odLa-cw via @wordpressdotcom
* Patrick Larkin ‏@bhsprincipal
School Leadership is A LOT like Lifeguarding [Slide] via @plugusin #cpchat
* Chris Sousa ‏@csousanh
Really, schools aren’t struggling because of failing teachers! Another politically motivated beating: http://huff.to/N02GbW #midleved #edchat
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
5 Ways Twitter Strengthens A School’s Learning Community ~ for @msmatters followers ~ #fhucid #fhuedu642 http://tinyurl.com/brz9cyw

News:

Bunkum Awards

The award show for shoddy Educational Research…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=P-hJagz6ytM
http://nepc.colorado.edu/think-tank/bunkum-awards/2011

Resources:

Google World Wonders Project

The Google World Wonders Project is a platform which brings world heritage sites of the modern and ancient world online. Using Street View, 3D modeling and other Google technologies, we have made these amazing sites accessible to everyone across the globe. With videos, photos and in-depth information, you can now explore the world wonders from your armchair just as if you were there.
http://www.google.com/culturalinstitute/worldwonders/
or
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/06/world-wonders-new-flipped-classroom.html

How Long Would It Take You to Read “War and Peace?”

From Lee Kolbert:
I just stumbled across this reading test that assesses how fast you read at your normal pace. (My score was 369 WPM – 48% faster than the national average.) The free test includes a just a few comprehension questions and in all will only take a few minutes.
http://www.leekolbert.com/2012/05/how-long-would-it-take-you-to-read-war.html

Web Spotlight:

Child Poverty


http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2012/05/charts-pay-no-attention-to-the-nations-child-poverty-rate.html
The Chart:
http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/.a/6a00e54f8c25c988340168ebef9408970c-popup

Examples of PBL

APHistory. Interesting use of Google Sites. What if projects. The kids also published their work.
https://sites.google.com/a/micds.org/apush-2011-2012-final-projects/

Nathan Hall: 100+ Student Sites that don’t require registration

http://www.diigo.com/list/nathanghall/no-registration-needed-for-students

Strategies:

Games to Enhance Classroom Teaching

http://people.uncw.edu/ertzbergerj/all.html

ScienceFix: YouTube Science Channel for Middle School Experiments

My name is Darren Fix, and I made ScienceFix.com to share my favorite demos that I do in my middle school science classes.
http://www.youtube.com/user/sciencefix

Video of the Podcast:

http://youtu.be/Bh_3Jl_eHEk

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 207 Hanging Out

Jokes You Can Use:

All visual jokes today.  (Go see the Google+ recording.)  

On Our Mind:

Kathy Hunt-Ullock 1951-2012
AMLE Remarks:  “Kathy Hunt-Ullock passed away on Saturday, May 19, surrounded by family and friends. She was a well-loved member of the AMLE family, developing friendships along the way as she espoused doing what’s best for middle grades students. She will be greatly missed by all of us in the middle level education community.”
Kathy’s Website

Virtual Presentations:

MiddleTalk:  9 Dangerous Things & Book Club this summer

9 Dangerous things you were taught in school:
1. The people in charge have all the answers.
That’s why they are so wealthy and happy and healthy and powerful—ask any teacher.

2. Learning ends when you leave the classroom.
Your fort building, trail forging, frog catching, friend making, game playing, and drawing won’t earn you any extra credit. Just watch TV.

3. The best and brightest follow the rules.
You will be rewarded for your subordination, just not as much as your superiors, who, of course, have their own rules.

4. What the books say is always true.
Now go read your “world is flat” chapter. There will be a test.

5. There is a very clear, single path to success.
It’s called college. Everyone can join the top 1% if they do well enough in school and ignore the basic math problem inherent in that idea.

6. Behaving yourself is as important as getting good marks.
Whistle-blowing, questioning the status quo, and thinking your own thoughts are no-nos. Be quiet and get back on the assembly line.

7. Standardized tests measure your value.
By value, I’m talking about future earning potential, not anything else that might have other kinds of value.

8. Days off are always more fun than sitting in the classroom.
You are trained from a young age to base your life around dribbles of allocated vacation. Be grateful for them.

9. The purpose of your education is your future career.
And so you will be taught to be a good worker. You have to teach yourself how to be something more.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jessicahagy/2012/05/02/nine-dangerous-things-you-were-taught-in-school/2/

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter People:  Gary Johnston, Jeff Trudell, Aric Haley, Michael Jones, Connect Michigan (Michigan Public Service Commission), and @HeyLeeAnn!

Advisory:

New Computer Algorithm Knows Your Phony Smile [VIDEO]

Can you tell whether a smile is real or not?
http://mashable.com/2012/05/25/algorithm-smile/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

In the April/May, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, two articles dealt with the topic of misconceptions

In the first article, “Misunderstanding Misconceptions,” Page Keeley defines the term misconceptions.  In the second article, “Investigating Students’ Ideas About the Flow of Matter and Energy in Living Systems,” authors Melanie Taylor, Kimberly Cohen, R. Keith Esch, and P. Sean Smith give examples of student misconceptions and provide the corresponding correct ideas.  The topic of this podcast mainly focuses in on the process of photosynthesis.

 

From the Twitterverse:

* Ron Peck ‏@Ron_Peck
Pls help @cybraryman1 get to #ISTE12 by assisting the #istenewbie12 project -> #cpchat #edchat #edcampphillyYay! We are at 70% of our #ISTE12 Newbie Project goal and payday is near. Plz help @cybraryman1 get to ISTE. #edchat
iPad Plaza ‏@iPadPlaza
Apple iPad May Be Getting Microsoft Office Soon http://sns.mx/gnlDy1 #iPad
* Jeff Johnson ‏@ipadeducators
iBooks & grade7: http://ow.ly/bah12 #ipaded #ipadedchat #abed
* Eric Sheninger ‏@NMHS_Principal
Think-Pair-Share Variations by @kathyperret http://buff.ly/KGb0t1
* Jeff Russell ‏@jrussellteacher
A Standardized Composition Test http://pulse.me/s/9EpL9
* ABC News ‏@ABC
10 Cheap Gizmos and Ordinary Items Every Traveler Needs http://abcn.ws/JBuPX7
* pammoran ‏@pammoran
Why one shot “national” tests of any kind fail as authentic assessments of and for learning http://j.mp/JBjLV3 shared by @saorog
* Carol A. Josel ‏@schoolwise
‘Facebook parenting’ is destroying our children’s privacy http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/25/opinion/sultan-miller-facebook-parenting/index.html #cnn
* Maggie Cary ‏@maggiecary
How to Handle the Class Clown:
* World and Everything ‏@TWERadio
A Memorial Day edition of ‘The World & Everything in It’: Guarding the Tomb of the Unknowns, 150th anniv. of Taps, more http://ow.ly/basz5
* LeeAnn ‏@HeyLeeAnn
Grockit Launches Learnist, a Pinterest for Education http://zite.to/LtePR0 via @zite
 Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
How NOT To Prepare A Student For A Standardized Test“Parents Describe Why and How They are Engaged in Their Children’s Learning”
* Bill Ivey ‏@bivey
MT @plugusin: from @teachingquality: The Sad Irony Behind Teacher Leadership – http://ow.ly/b0MrM <Is it an irony deliberately created?
* Steven W. Anderson ‏@web20classroom
From @timbuckteeth-5 Tools For The Global Educator:
*Neil deGrasse Tyson‏@neiltysonKnowing how to think empowers you far beyond those who know only what to think.

 

 

News:

Educators Use Mobile Devices More Than General Public

Principals and administrators are also more likely to use those devices than the teachers and librarians they oversee, the report says, though teachers are also more frequent users of those tools than the general public.
“For many of us, we cannot truly appreciate the value of a new technology tool until we have realized a direct benefit from its use in our personal or work life,” said Julie Evans, the president and CEO of Project Tomorrow, the Irvine, Calif.-based nonprofit education research organization that conducts the Speak Up survey, in a statement. “That’s the same for educators.”
Administrators who used smartphones or tablets were found roughly twice as likely to consider a bring-your-own-technology approach for students at their campuses, pilot such a policy, or work in a school or district that provided students mobile devices for educational use.
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/DigitalEducation/2012/05/educators_more_likely_to_use_m.html

How summer increases the achievement gap

Much of the discussion about the wide discrepancies in educational achievement between poor and affluent students is focused on what schools and teachers should be doing to close it. But researchers are gathering more evidence suggesting that summer—when students are typically out of contact with their schools and teachers—is one of the root causes of the gap.
http://hechingered.org/content/how-summer-increases-the-achievement-gap_5072/

 

Our Principal’s Reaction To Being Included In The Wash. Post’s List Of Top High Schools

Two years ago we were on a list of schools described as ‘dropout factories.’ And now, two years later, without doing anything substantially different, we are listed among the top nine percent of high schools in the country only because a different metric was used.  This seems to be a blatant example of how these types of quantitative evaluations lack substance.”)
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/05/20/our-principals-reaction-to-being-included-in-the-wash-posts-list-of-top-high-schools/

 

Standards would immerse Arizona students in science

Arizona is one of 26 states leading a nationwide initiative aimed at improving science education by requiring a deeper understanding of key concepts and incorporating science and technology in all subjects.
The new standards are based on a framework developed by the National Research Council with input from the National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The science standards are separate from but align with the new Common Core State Standards that Arizona will implement in English and math.
Under Next Generation, students will be expected to tackle actual problems — for example, a jammed-up school-bus lane — using engineering concepts.
Adding more hands-on projects will be a big change for teachers
Kaufmann said the next step will be to create a national science exam, which is probably at least five years away.
“I have to tell you, until there is a test that counts, science is still is not going to be as important, especially in the elementary grades.”
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2012/05/17/20120517arizona-science-standards.html

Student Principals (Contributed by Ron King)


How would students run the show if given a chance?
http://groups.diigo.com/site/redirect_item/student-principals-5342100

Resources:

Mr. Rogers talks sarcastically about children and consumerism

Apparently, kids and consumerism is nothing new.
http://twentytwowords.com/2012/05/25/mr-rogers-talks-sarcastically-about-children-and-consumerism/

Web Citizenship and Media Literacy Curriculum (Contributed by Ron King via Diigo)
http://groups.diigo.com/site/redirect_item/digital-literacy-and-citizenship-curriculum-for-grades-6-8-5342096

Play me a story?

Playfic, the online community that lets you write, remix, share, and play interactive text-based games with the world.
There is definitely a learning curve with the site.
http://playfic.com/

Burn Note

Burn Note lets you send messages that are deleted after they are read.
You can use Burn Note to send a password or have an off-the-record conversation with a friend.
https://burnnote.com/#/

Readlists

What’s a Readlist? A group of web pages—articles, recipes, course materials, anything—bundled into an e-book you can send to your Kindle, iPad, or iPhone.
http://readlists.com/

Easy Web Calendar

Localendar is great for Churches, Schools, Teams, Non-Profits, Families, and Webmasters that need a free web calendar
http://www.localendar.com/elsie

Web Spotlight:

Honesty In The Computer Lab

The reason I’m writing about this today is because of a guest column written by researcher Dan Ariely in The Wall Street Journal today — Why We Lie. It’s an excerpt from his newest book.
I’ve found that when I remember to apply my own version of that method — before we head to the lab, I take less than a minute to remind people why it’s important to listen to the English audio for their own development and because I want to be able to trust them — it’s hardly ever an issue. After that 40 second “spiel,” I also ask people to raise their hands if they commit to staying only on the assigned sites.
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/05/25/honesty-in-the-computer-lab/

 

Knowledge Graph

The Knowledge Graph enables you to search for things, people or places that Google knows about—landmarks, celebrities, cities, sports teams, buildings, geographical features, movies, celestial objects, works of art and more—and instantly get information that’s relevant to your query. This is a critical first step towards building the next generation of search, which taps into the collective intelligence of the web and understands the world a bit more like people do.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/introducing-knowledge-graph-things-not.html

Strategies:

Project-Based Learning: Success Start to Finish

http://www.edutopia.org/stw-project-based-learning-best-practices

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

View the video of the recording here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtMMxnQFY1c

MSM 205: Split or Steal?

Jokes You Can Use:

“I haven’t slept for days.”
How come?
I only sleep at night.

On Our Mind:

ESL objectives, Professional Development & How to Win Friends and Influence People.
#PLNfail
Congrats to all the EMU students who were dismissed today . . .

Eileen Award:

  • Jeffry Prickett (Facebook & Twitter)
  • Eleanor Ricardo

Advisory:

Food

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/04/25/chart-showing-the-10-companies-that-own-most-of-the-food-products-we-buy/

Split or Steal

Here’s the deal. £13,600 are on the line. Each contestant must choose Split or Steal. If they both choose Split, they each get half of the money. If one chooses Split and the other Steal, the one who chose Steal gets all the money. And if they both choose Steal, nobody gets any money.
Before they choose, they are allowed to discuss their plan together. It is a battle of wits, combining both logic and the ability to read and manipulate one’s opponent. Check out how one ingenious contestant chose to let this scenario play out…

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/04/28/split-or-steal-a-creative-and-kind-use-of-logic-and-manipulation/

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

The topic is Reading Ladders and Science.  “Climb on up and enjoy the podcast.”

In the March, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, Colleen Sheehy and Karina Clemmons shared an article entitled, “Opening the door to science instruction for all through literature.”

The article focused on a strategy called “reading ladders.”  The vision for reading ladders came from envisioning different levels of text difficulty to be different rungs on a ladder.  Teachers can use the idea of reading ladders as a metaphor and framework when employing text to enhance and supplement inquiry-based science instruction.

They provide a very good example of reading ladders in which they show how themed picture books, children’s books, and young adult literature novels can be used to build content knowledge and enhance science instruction.

From the Twitterverse:

50 resources for #iPad use in the classroom zite.to/L1EOng via @zite ~ @msmatters #fhuedu642 #mLearning #edtech

Social Media For Administrators [Blog Posts] #fhuedu642 #edtech ~ Great for @msmatters listeners tinyurl.com/d5lh5jm

25 Ways To Use #iPads In The Classroom by Degree of Difficulty | Edudemic #mLearning #edtech => @msmatters tinyurl.com/ctnwk5y

* Scott McLeod ‏ @mcleod
New bookmark: Backward Design – Digital Learning Toolbox

New bookmark: What’s the “problem” with MOOCs?

DangIrrel: Nurture your kids’ passions, even if they’re making Pokemon game walkthrough videos #edtech

* Nancy White ‏ @NancyW
RT @cmt1 How Do You Create A Culture Of Innovation? http://zite.to/IHQBqu via @zite #edchat #education #edchat
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏ @mrsebiology
RT @NMHS_Principal: Creating Assignments That Work for Digital Learning Environments http://j.mp/IZsCAe #edtech #edchat #elearning
* Will Richardson ‏ @willrich45
Depressing figures on the appeal of teaching in the US #edchat #edreform
* Mark Barnes ‏ @markbarnes19
Neat ideas “@technolit: Creative classroom seating ideas: http://tinyurl.com/7r82ldo via The Big Fresh enewsletter from @ChoiceLiteracy
* Miguel Guhlin ‏ @mguhlin
Ways to Evaluate Educational Apps ipad http://dlvr.it/1WsJ2W
* E-Learning Council ‏ @learningcouncil
RT @stileskelly 50 Best Sources of Free Education Online #edchat #edtech http://j.mp/Jyz5nk More sources for an information junkie!
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏ @mrsebiology
Formative Assessment Strategies List: http://goo.gl/R1z7X #edchat #midleved #elemchat
* Tweeter of Wit ‏ @TweeterofWit
@Kill_Weather: INSTALLING SUMMER….. ███████████████░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ 44% DONE. Installation failed. 404 error: Season not found. #iwn
* russeltarr ‏ @russeltarr
Evidence that IQ tests provide a very limited definition of “intelligence”: http://tinyurl.com/3wrm5cz
* Chris Christensen ‏ @christensen143
New website aims to guide educators through education technology maze #edtech
21h ☆ Lee Kolbert ‏ @TeachaKidd
25 educators to follow on Twitter. http://www.mathgametime.com/blog/2012/05/top-25-teachers-educators-on-twitter/
Watch for #midleved on Twitter!

News:

Change the World

by Vickie Davis – Cool Cat Teacher
We CAN change the world, say my ninth grade students Kerrie and Madison. These girls chose to animate a song using Nomad Paint brushes on touch screen (Lenovo m90z) computers and a Bamboo tablet for their Freshman project (see assignment here). They each animated half of this film. There is a definite improvement in their abilities as each half of the film progresses.
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/05/we-can-change-world-one-child-at-time.html

Parents who sued school over son’s punishment for cheating receive hate messages

Jack Berghouse doesn’t dispute that his son, a sophomore at Sequoia High School, copied someone else’s homework. But the Redwood City father believes the school district was wrong to kick his teenager out of an English honors class for the offense, and his decision to sue has embroiled the family in a public, opinionated debate.
Berghouse believes the punishment is disproportionate to the offense and will jeopardize the academic future of his son, who he said has a chance at attending an Ivy League school.
“He knows it’s wrong,” he said of his son. “You cannot imagine the mental and emotional penalty that has been inflicted upon him. We’ve offered several penalties, anything other than being kicked out of the English program.”
The parents suggested, for example, that their son could work as an after-school teacher’s assistant for the rest of the school year, Berghouse said.

http://www.mercurynews.com/san-mateo-county-times/ci_20493867/parents-who-sued-school-over-sons-punishment-cheating
and the follow up:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinion-la/la-ol-school-cheat-20120427,0,1656872.story

Evaluate Me, Please

I want to know what works and what doesn’t. Like my students, I thrive on feedback. So evaluate me, please. But let’s lay down a few ground rules.

  • I teach children, not targets or standards, so please don’t walk into my classroom expecting to see me teaching a specific skill at an exact moment in time. That’s not how it works here.
  • Don’t assume you know my kids as well as I do. That little boy with his back to me? Yeah, I know he’s off-task, but six months ago he would’ve thrown a desk when he was angry. Now he just turns his back. If I leave him alone, he’ll calm down and eventually apologize. If I say something to him now he’ll explode. Ask me about it later, but right now, trust that I know my kids.
  • If you want to know how far I’ve taken my students, then look at where they were when they came in my room and where they are when they leave. I do good work, but I can’t bring a child who is three years behind up to grade level in one year. If I could, believe me I would.
  • Understand that social and emotional growth can’t be measured on a test, but they are measured in real life. When we meet, let’s talk about how my kids have progressed in these areas as well.
  • Join in. Ask questions. Talk to my kids. You’ll learn a lot more by being part of the learning than you will sitting in judgment in the back of the room.
  • Talk to me. You bring a different perspective to my room. Ask questions, offer suggestions, but don’t forget to point out my strengths.
  • Remember that every year is different. What was an area of strength last year may be an area of struggle this year. Don’t assume it’s because I’ve slacked off or done something wrong. Make me feel safe enough to ask for support.
  • Build a climate of collaboration and trust. My students don’t learn in isolation, and neither do I.
  • By all means, hold me accountable for what I do within the classroom.

Evaluate me, please. Just remember my worth shouldn’t be determined by some arbitrary value added model based on subpar standardized tests. It should come from what I do with the students I have each year, from my professional growth, and from formative, ongoing conversations.
http://teachfromtheheart.wordpress.com/2012/04/24/evaluate-me-please/

Resources:

KANEX Pro- AirPlay® Mirroring For VGA Projector

Kanex ATV Pro allows a VGA projector to use Apple AirPlay mirroring from an iPad to Apple TV.  Eliminate the need for expensive HDMI projection equipment upgrades.  Join the thousands of classrooms nationwide that can mirror and stream content direct to a VGA projector via an Apple TV.
http://www.kanexlive.com/atvpro

Technology Integration Matrix Grade Level Index

This page provides a breakdown of videos within the Technology Integration Matrix by grade level. Although you may be primarily interested in a particular level, we encourage you to view the ways in which technology is used in other grade levels. For example, you will find videos of high school classrooms in which the technology tools could be used in the same way with middle school or elementary level students. Some videos involve students from both middle and high school grades and some involve students from both middle and elementary grades. These videos appear in both lists below.
http://fcit.usf.edu/matrix/gradelevel.php

TED-Ed – Insults by Shakespeare

  • Watch
  • Quick Quiz
  • Think
  • Dig Deeper

If you sign in, you can make adjustments on most sections of the page. For example, you can deselect Quick Quiz questions, add Think questions, and add links to the Dig Deeper section.
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/insults-by-shakespeare

Google Education On-Air

https://sites.google.com/site/eduonair/home

Virtual 4T Conference

The Virtual Conference will be held May19th through May 22nd. It is a 24/7 conference and is free and open to any educator.
*Disclosure- I’m presenting a session.
http://4tvirtualcon.soe.umich.edu/
Conference Sessions:
http://4tvirtualcon.soe.umich.edu/?page_id=54
or
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?key=0Amyg3kn2ZRP0dC1yMGxfVV9xTzkwYVIzVDhhbUtfUGc&output=html

Web Spotlight:

Broomstick

I’m Sebastian, a 14 year old Kiwi innovator, Mac app developer, student and tech enthusiast from New Zealand, currently living in Paris.
http://www.zibity.com/broomstick

Dangerously Irrelevant:  Web videos educators should see

http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2010/11/12-videos-to-spark-educators-thinking.html

Strategies:

TinkerCad

Design in 3D what you’ve always dreamed of, but never thought possible. Until now.
Join the Tinkercad community and learn how to create your first real things in just a few minutes.
https://tinkercad.com/home/
or

3D Tin

Create 3D models in your browser.
http://www.3dtin.com/

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 204: Make Yourself Smarter!

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Johnny Depp is making another Pirates of the Carribean.  It’s “Arrrrgh” Rated . . .
RUTH BUZZI ‏ @Ruth_A_Buzzi

On Our Mind:

Bad Pirate Jokes . . .

 

Eileen Award:

  • Dave Brown
  • Mary Alise Herrera
  • Craig Malkin

Advisory:

Thou Shall Not Commit Logical Fallacies

A logical fallacy is usually what has happened when someone is wrong about something. It’s a flaw in reasoning. They’re like tricks or illusions of thought, and they’re often very sneakily used by politicians and the media to fool people.
Don’t be fooled! This website and poster have been designed to help you identify and call out dodgy logic wherever it may raise its ugly, incoherent head.
If you see someone committing a logical fallacy, link them to the relevant fallacy to school them in thinky awesomeness and win the intellectual affections of those who happen across your comment by appearing clever and interesting e.g. yourlogicalfallacyis.com/strawman (rollover/click icons above).

http://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/

 

Middle School Science Minute

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

The National Science Teachers Association has recently announce its Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12.  In this podcast we look at three more of the books which are very appropriate for students in grades 6 – 8.  They are:

  • Baby Mammoth Mummy Frozen in Time! A Prehistoric Animal’s Journey into the 21st Century
    by Christopher Sloan
  • The Elephant Scientist
    by Caitlin O’Connell and Donna M. Jackson
  • Elephant Talk: The Surprising Science of Elephant Communication
    by Ann Downer

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

* Steve ‏ @2learn2

* Leigh Graves Wolf ‏ @gravesle

* Vicki Davis ‏ @coolcatteacher

  • Have discernment! Some ppl make things up! RT @MichaelCatt: If you believe everything you read, you better not read. Japanese Proverb
* Daniel Pink ‏ @DanielPink

* Jane Balvanz ‏ @JaneBalvanz

  • So, what do those “tenured, lazy” educators do w/ their free time? They seek professional development on Twitter, Monday- Sunday.
* Justin ‏ @justinstallings

* Chris Sousa ‏ @csousanh

  • Free Range Learners – How Students Hunt for Educational Content #edchat #tichat
* Jerry Blumengarten ‏ @cybraryman1

* Ancient Proverbs ‏ @AncientProverbs

  • Excellence is an art won by training & habituation. -Aristotle
* androidinabox.com ‏ @androidinabox

  • The new Ainol Novo 7 Aurora with LG IPS display is now available! Come back and order from the following link for… http://fb.me/1ynxCLnLj
* ABC News ‏ @ABC

* Richard Byrne ‏ @rmbyrne

* edutopia ‏ @edutopia

Don’t forget to check the #midleved on Twitter for middle school PLN connections!

 

 

News:

Can You Make Yourself Smarter?

Psychologists have long regarded intelligence as coming in two flavors: crystallized intelligence, the treasure trove of stored-up information and how-to knowledge (the sort of thing tested on “Jeopardy!” or put to use when you ride a bicycle); and fluid intelligence.

Working memory is more than just the ability to remember a telephone number long enough to dial it; it’s the capacity to manipulate the information you’re holding in your head — to add or subtract those numbers, place them in reverse order or sort them from high to low.
The training tasks generally require only 15 to 25 minutes of work per day, five days a week, and have been found to improve scores on tests of fluid intelligence in as little as four weeks.
But already, people with disorders including attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (A.D.H.D.) and traumatic brain injury have seen benefits from training. Gains can persist for up to eight months after treatment.

If measuring intelligence through matrices seems arbitrary, consider how central pattern recognition is to success in life. If you’re going to find buried treasure in baseball statistics to give your team an edge by signing players unappreciated by others, you’d better be good at matrices. If you want to exploit cycles in the stock market, or find a legal precedent in 10 cases, or for that matter, if you need to suss out a woolly mammoth’s nature to trap, kill and eat it — you’re essentially using the same cognitive skills tested by matrices.

N-back challenges users to remember something — the location of a cat or the sound of a particular letter — that is presented immediately before (1-back), the time before last (2-back), the time before that (3-back), and so on. If you do well at 2-back, the computer moves you up to 3-back. Do well at that, and you’ll jump to 4-back. On the other hand, if you do poorly at any level, you’re nudged down a level. The point is to keep the game just challenging enough that you stay fully engaged.

Jaeggi and Buschkuehl gave progressive matrix tests to students at Bern and then asked them to practice the dual N-back for 20 to 25 minutes a day. When they retested them at the end of a few weeks, they were surprised and delighted to find significant improvement.
Play the free on-line version of the N-back game

The study did have its shortcomings. “We used just one reasoning task to measure their performance,” she says. “We showed improvements in this one fluid-reasoning task, which is usually highly correlated with other measures as well.”

For some, the debate is far from settled. Randall Engle, a leading intelligence researcher at the Georgia Tech School of Psychology, views the proposition that I.Q. can be increased through training with a skepticism verging on disdain. “May I remind you of ‘cold fusion’?” he says, referring to the infamous claim, long since discredited, that nuclear fusion could be achieved at room temperature in a desktop device. “People were like, ‘Oh, my God, we’ve solved our energy crisis.’ People were rushing to throw money at that science. Well, not so fast. The military is now preparing to spend millions trying to make soldiers smarter, based on working-memory training. What that one 2008 paper did was to send hundreds of people off on a wild-goose chase, in my opinion.

The most prominent takedown of I.Q. training came in June 2010, when the neuroscientist Adrian Owen published the results of an experiment conducted in coordination with the BBC television show “Bang Goes the Theory.” After inviting British viewers to participate, Owen recruited 11,430 of them to take a battery of I.Q. tests before and after a six-week online program designed to replicate commercially available “brain building” software. (The N-back was not among the tasks offered.) “Although improvements were observed in every one of the cognitive tasks that were trained,” he concluded in the journal Nature, “no evidence was found for transfer effects to untrained tasks, even when those tasks were cognitively closely related.”

While studies of twins suggest that intelligence has a fixed genetic component, at least 20 to 50 percent of the variation in I.Q. is due to other factors, whether social, school or family-based. Even more telling, average I.Q.’s have been rising steadily for a century as access to schooling and technology expands, a phenomenon known as the Flynn Effect.

“We know that height is heavily genetically determined,” Jonides told me during our meeting at the University of Michigan. “But we also know there are powerful environmental influences on height, like nutrition. So the fact that intelligence is partly heritable doesn’t mean you can’t modify it.”

Chein has found, translates into the kind of real-world improvements associated with increases in cognitive capabilities. “We’ve seen, in college kids who do it, improvements in their reading-comprehension scores,” Chein said. “And in a sample of adults, 65 and older, it appears to improve their ability to keep track of what they recently said, so they don’t repeat themselves.”

After eight weeks of training — 75 minutes per day, twice a week — Bunge found that the children in the reasoning group scored, on average, 10 points higher on a nonverbal I.Q. test than they had before the training. Four of the 17 children who played the reasoning games gained an average of more than 20 points. In another study, not yet published, Bunge found improvements in college students preparing to take the LSAT.

Of course, in order to improve, you need to do the training. For some, whether brilliant or not so much, training may simply be too hard — or too boring.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/magazine/can-you-make-yourself-smarter.html?_r=2&src=me&ref=magazine

 

Resources:

CorePlanner

CorePlanner:  Resource tool for teachers planning their lessons around the Common Core Standards.
http://coreplanner.com/

Compared to:

http://lessonwriter.com/default.aspx

 

PBS Kids Cyberchase – Dozens of Math Activities

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/04/pbs-kids-cyberchase-dozens-of-math.html

 

3D Toad

Putting a spin on Education.

  • Dissections
  • Animal Skeltons
  • Human Skeltons
  • Music
  • Geology
  • TRX Workout
  • Dental Hygiene
  • Coral
  • Yoga
  • Fossils
  • History
  • Ballet Positions
  • Chemistry
  • Emergency Preparedness – Need Sign-in
  • Dental Program – Need Sign-in
  • Computer Networking

http://www.3dtoad.com/

 

Taylor Mali

Mali, a former teacher and now full-time globe-trotting poet/advocate/recruiter for the teaching profession, has followed up his most successful poem with a book of the same title.  I read it in 2 sittings and it made me feel great— it’s a highly recommended “just-cause” or end-of-year gift for a teacher in your life.
The small, novelty-sized hardcover is broken into 26 vignettes, with several of Mali’s poems mixed in. The book has heart and Mali’s love of teaching shines through. What elevatesWhat Teachers Make above the next paean to teachers on the shelf is Mali’s irreverence and a keen ability to tell big stories with short word counts. He also gave me a few ideas for tweaks in my own classroom, most notably in the chapter titled “No One Leaves My Class Early For Any Reason.” I do need to tighten up about that.
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/get-fracas/04-2012/taylor-malis-what-teachers-make-book-winner

YouTube Speech: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxsOVK4syxU

Web Spotlight:

33 Animals Who Are Extremely Disappointed In You

Not angry, just disappointed
http://www.buzzfeed.com/expresident/animals-who-are-extremely-disappointed-in-you

The 5 Worst Things a Teacher Can Say to Students

By Dan Brown
5. “I know this may seem pointless but we have to get through it…”
4. “I don’t know what I’m doing.”
3. “The other class did well with this. What’s wrong with you guys?”
2. “You will never be able to (fill in the blank).”
1. “I get paid whether you (fill in the blank) or not.”
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/get-fracas/04-2012/5-worst-things-teacher-can-say-students

 

Test Scores and Housing Costs

By MOTOKO RICH
Parents hoping to enroll their children in the best public schools have long known that where you live matters and that housing prices can be dictated by the quality of the nearby schools.

That means that a family would have to pay more per year to move into a good public school zone than for their children to attend some private schools. Translated into an average home price, the gap works out to an average of $205,000 more for a home near a high-performing school.

“We think of public education as being free, and we think of the main divide in education between public and private schools,” Mr. Rothwell said in an interview. “But it turns out that it’s actually very expensive to enroll your children in a high- scoring public school.”
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/19/test-scores-and-housing-costs/

 

A Child’s Helping Hand on Portions

MARSHALL REID, 12, a sixth grader from Sanford, N.C., has a know-it-all quality that can drive some teachers crazy. As he does prep work for a Cuban black-bean stew for his family’s supper, he leans over a cutting board with a self-assured smile and a dramatically furrowed brow.
Marshall had been bullied about his weight for years. To fortify himself for school, he took comfort in breakfasts of cans of roast beef hash, plus biscuits and gravy. That year, the school fitness report said his body mass index was 32.3. He was emphatically obese.
he said, “Mom, let’s do the opposite of ‘Super Size Me’ ” — Morgan Spurlock’s documentary about a McDonald’s-only diet for 30 days — “and be healthy for a month. I’m tired of this.”
Marshall’s sister Jordan, now 15, lives on the other side of the somatotype moon: a relentless soccer player, she inhales junk food but remains thin. Marshall’s father was unable to help much. Army Lt. Col. Dan Reid was in Iraq.
They decided to make YouTube videos of Marshall’s new meals, to share with his father and to keep Marshall on track: see Marshall reading labels on a can of peas at the Piggly Wiggly; discussing how to reduce fat and sugar in recipes; boasting about the taste and healthy balance of his meals.
Turns out that the same know-it-all quality that can irk a child’s teachers finds its natural habitat in how-to videos.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/25/dining/a-child-offers-plan-on-portion-control-for-dieters.html

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.