Here are my notes from our first day of in-class EdTech presentations:
Keiro: Stop Motion Animation
- Great fun to implement into the classroom (with clay, vegetables, post-its, drawings… anything!)
- App:
- Stop Motion (free for apple)
- Question button shows what all the buttons do
- Stop Motion (free for apple)
-
- Can animate on Photoshop
- Window tab — timeline — make layers — in timeline, select two layers and then select twinning button: say the two photos where of a ball moving across a table from one location to another, the twinning button will create more images to fill the gaps and have it be a steadier progression from the first location to the next
- Can animate on Photoshop
- Pros — can be used in every subject
- Cons — technological malfunctions — need to give time and leave room for error
- Things to watch out for — best to have photos taken from a remote as clicking the button directly on the camera shakes it.
- Resources:
Anne, Eliza, Kelly, Connor: Google Geographic Products
- Google Maps
- My Maps
- Points, lines, shapes
- Attach media
- Calculate routes, perimeters, areas
- Layers
- Share the map to collaborate
- Colour icons by value (i.e., temperature, altitude, etc.)
- Change the base map
- Lesson/Project Ideas
- Points of interest map
- Student commentary
- Family heritage map
- Map languages
- Class info
- Fictional settings (map out fictional setting you are reading about in class)
- Trip planning – real or imaginary
- Google street view
- Not just streets
- Cultural, political, physical, geography
- Google cultural institute
- Museums (can zoom in on art), natural wonders, architecture
- Art, curricular content, historical documents, deep dives
- My Maps
- Google Earth
- For experience over utility
- Complete 3D satellite data
- Find your house
- Flight simulator
- View the past
- View layers (in 2009 a bunch of NGO partnered up with Google Earth and can see where endangered species, ecosystems are, etc.)
- Google Moon (narrated by astronauts who were on those missions), Mars, and Sky
- VoyageurLesson/Project Ideas
- 20 Questions
- Engage in real-world math activities/experiences
- Explore different environments
- Create your Own KML Tour
- Google Earth Scavenger Hunt
- Using My Maps in the classroom
- Can track routes that historical figures took in their explorations
- In a classroom
-
- Speak about online presence, online responsibility
- How do you feel about sharing your personal information, preferences, etc.
- Speak about online presence, online responsibility
-
- In Europe there is a legislation: the right to be forgotten, request companies to delete all your data
Katrina, Brie, Taylor: What is Digital Literacy and How can it be taught in Classrooms?
- What is D.L.?
- Information literacy — distinguishing fact and fiction. Who benefits from the information they are receiving and projecting
- Ethical use of digital resources
- Understanding digital footprint — what are you sharing?
- Protecting yourself online — teaching self-regulation
- Handling digital communication — don’t be a dick and don’t allow the screen to dehumanize communication
- Cyberbullying
- Lateral reading — who is writing this? Are they funded by someone who has a bias? Who has the power? Checking your resources, and their validity by understanding underlying biases.
- Youtube: crash course series on Navigating Digital Media Series
- MediaSmats.ca
- Canadian-specific content
- Resources for teachers and parents
- Including lesson plans
- Strategies, Tips, and Best practices
- Student choice and voice
- More creation than consumption — get them to be the creators
- Include multimodalities
- Focus on collaboration
- Ensure accessibility for all learners
- Crowd-accelerated learning — bring huge groups of people together (i.e., citizen science) to accelerate group learning
- Social media and peer-to-peer social learning
- Core competencies
- Digital literacies with Sex Education
Leave a Reply