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 211: The ISTE Show Redux (Part I).

On Our Mind:

ISTE:  After conference thoughts
Preparing for AMLE in November

Eileen Award:


  • Twitter:  Rich Kiker, Steve Chen, Chris Sousa, Gina Gallo, Pora Ora, IAIB Network, Michael Richardson, Charles Perry, Mary Clark, Elana Leoni, Riaz Abdulla, Michael Cohen, Vilia Reinsalu, Ann-Caryn Cleveland, Jason Eifling, Diethild, ViewARcom, Valencio Cardoso, Schoology, Jeff Bradbury, TeacherCast, Sandra Wozniak, @Lilylauren, DonFriesen, Tori McMurray, Ellie Dix,  “Teenage Whisperer”, Jazz Caine, Epic Limo Bus (which we didn’t use . . . ), and Emil Ahangarzadeh (Director of the Calif. Tech Statewide Education Tech Service).
  • Facebook:  Kyle Paul

If I had to guess what was the ISTE PLN vehicle of choice, I’d guess . . .

Advisory:

Book Club.

Here is one example:
http://2busybrunettes.com/2012/03/23/25-series-to-read-if-you-love-the-hunger-games/

Middle School Science Minute

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

In the Summer, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, the safety question of the month was “After lab work, should students use antibacterial hand wipes or just plain soap and water to clean their hands?”

Ken Roy, director of environmental health and safety for Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, Connecticut provides a great answer.  If you would like more information on science safety, you can purchase Ken’s book, “The NSTA Ready-Reference Guide to Safer Science,” through the NSTA bookstore.

From the Twitterverse:

* Cheryl Lykowski ‏@CLykowski
Web 2.0 for the Under 13s crowd http://zite.to/KVBztA via @zite
* Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne
New post: How to Ace Your Interview for a Teaching Position http://goo.gl/fb/t3qEa
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Proposal for the Creation of a Subdiscipline: Education Informatics #fhuedu508 http://tinyurl.com/7xcl9b2
* Shelly S Terrell ‏@ShellTerrell
Bloom’s Taxonomy According to Homer Simpson via @Larryferlazzo @GrammyLatino #edchat #education #eltchat #teachers
* Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
NEW: “My Social Studies Curriculum Is Freely Available Online”
* Susie Highley ‏@shighley
Big Campaign $$ for Indiana Supt. of Public Instruction comes from… New York and Pennsylvania?
* Miss Noor ㋡ ‏@missnoor28
100 Serious #Twitter Tips for Academics | @scoopit http://vsb.li/S8R3tx #EdTech #EdchatTI #SM
 tombarrett ‏@tombarrett
Why relationships matter in school http://gu.com/p/38zqa/tw great piece by @jactherat – cc @dabbs
* Bernajean Porter ‏@BernajeanPorter
To those who missed my ISTE transmedia storytelling [also transliteracies]-explore the concept through Nick DeMartino @http://ow.ly/bVMRM
 anabellem ‏@anabellem
Connecting more with colleagues improves craft, practice, and morale. Here are 25 ways to do a better job at it http://zite.to/MZz6yb #edchat
* Digital Maverick ‏@digitalmaverick
Challenge Based Learning: Making Movies with an iPad via @Ilotimo | @scoopit
* Stephanie Sandifer ‏@ssandifer
#ISTE12 Reflections | @scoopit
* Stephanie Sandifer ‏@ssandifer
ISTE 12: Escalators, Apps, and Sitting – Home – Doug Johnson’s Blue Skunk Blog | @scoopit
* Summer Howarth ‏@EduSum
RT @EduSum: That.Just.Happened- ISTE musings I A View From The Middle I #iste12 http://edusum.edublogs.org/2012/07/02/that-just-happened/

ISTE News:


Guest Post: “Four ISTE Challenges”

July 1, 2012 by Larry Ferlazzo
GUEST POST by Ben Curran

  • Less Tools, More Teaching
  • The End of the Echo Chamber
  • Diversity is Lacking
  • The End of Excess

http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/07/01/guest-post-four-iste-challenges/

ISTE Keynote: What were they thinking?

Posted by Brad Flickinger on Jun 26, 2012 in school technology
As I have said before in this blog, I attend edtech conferences to be inspired and to steal ideas to take back to my own school. But when I left the keynote that opened this year’s ISTE 2012 Conference, I was scratching my head wondering what was the purpose of what I had just witnessed. I felt embarrassed to be an educator. Did ISTE really just do this to me? Did they sell out? Did they take inspiring me too far?
http://www.schooltechnology.org/2012/06/26/iste-keynote-what-were-they-thinking/

ISTE Resources:

All of my notes can be found here.

ISTE 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.


Conference with iPad

So for ISTE 2012, I didn’t bring a laptop. Rather, I’m relying on my iPad and iPhone only.
Here are some of my thoughts:

Pros:
• Light weight. I really, really like not carrying around the 6 pound laptop.
• Ability to quickly capture audio, images and notes. Audio is kept in sync with the text.
• Flexibility. I use an external keyboard. Being able to just put my keyboard in my lap and set the iPad on the chair (next to or in front of me) or on the floor (in my bag) is very handy. Feels much less cumbersome. Barriers do make a difference. This is a much, much lower barrier.
• Battery life. It is AWESOME to not have to worry about finding a plug. It’s also nice to not have to constantly calculate how much longer before you need to find an outlet.

Cons:
• I usually take my notes and combine them into a “booklet”. To do this, I utilize Headings and other styles. This is not available on my notetaking software that I’m using. Thus, I’ll have to take some time when I get back to pull the notes together.

ISTE Walk

We had a good chat on the walk back to the Hotel. Specifically, we chatted about the Panel Discussion at ISTE2012 Conference.

Here is a snippet of that conversation. But first an overview:

The Panel was comprised of Sir Kenneth Robinson, Shawn Covell, Marc Prensky, and Mayim Bialik.

Sir Kenneth Robinson is very polished and graceful on stage. He was definitely selling his book, but was funny and engaging. He talked about how he was told Americans don’t get irony. That isn’t true, he said. After all, we have No Child Left Behind. Whoever named that sure understood irony. He also talked about how we can’t afford to not make changes to education.

Shawn Covell was representing QualComm. She is a political representative for them. Her role was really representing QualComm and their upcoming conference. Predictably, her focus was completely on wireless access and mobile devices.

Marc Prensky was pretty good. He is more of a futurist than truly an educator. His information was interesting to think about. He talked about Passion and it’s importance. He also talked about focusing on the kids.

Dr. Mayim Bialik talked about a tutor that she had that made a difference in her life. Her parents were teachers. It wasn’t until she was 15 that she learned that she loved science. She talked about how she is representing Texas Instruments here. She talked a little about being a teacher in the “Home school” community.

Our conversation on the way home:
A) way too much “commercial” conversation. The QualComm representative isn’t to be blamed. That is basically her role. Why ISTE chose to put her on stage is another question.
B) Dr. Bialik was disappointing. She never talked about her role/experience as a neuroscientist. Rather, at one point, she said “there are probably people in the audience more qualified than I am to answer”… In fact, she repeated this a couple of times. Marc Prensky was asked a question about the effect of “screens” on the development of the brain. He answered and then threw it over to “the neuroscientist”. She completely passed.
C) Marc Prensky also brought up the idea of the 15% of kids who are successful in school and will be despite/ in spite of the educational system. What about the other 85%, he asked.
This led to a rich discussion on the walk. Dr. Bialik was on stage, in front of 13,000 educators. Her experience was abnormal (in the sense that it was not normal). She is currently involved with home school kids. Are these part of the 15%? Are these kids who really don’t need any change in the system? How does this impact the 85%?

We also chatted about the effect that business and the business model has had on education. That discussion will have to wait.

Overall, it was a disappointing Keynote. Sir Kenneth Robinson was good. However, there was a way, way long commercial for ISTE at the beginning. The panel discussion didn’t work. Had the panel been comprised of Sir Ken, Marc Prensky and a couple more educators, it may have been fruitful. However, as it was, two of the panel members just couldn’t contribute much.

Ah, well. Here’s hoping the sessions are effective tomorrow.