Technology at Chapin School






         

January 8, 2008

Using Delicious

Filed under: Web 2.0, Web sites — @ 6:24 am

As a recent convert to Delicious, I spent a good part of the vacation spiffing up my Delicious page of links. I have added many new links for curriculum integration content and many new resources for Biology, Chemistry, and History. For those of you new to Delicious, please use my links to explore the many possibilities Delicious offers, from sharing links with a colleague, to monitoring your student’s research, to finding great websites recommended by others. Here is the link to my main Delicious page, but then use the tags search to find those links that will be most helpful to your curriculum.

December 20, 2007

Web 2.0 Presentation

Filed under: Web 2.0, Web sites — @ 12:42 pm

[slideshare id=208897&doc=web-20-presentation-119816597360255-5&w=425]

December 10, 2007

Web 2.0 for Foreign Language Teachers

Filed under: Foreign Language Teachers, Web 2.0 — @ 10:41 am

Foreign language teachers have so many possibilities open to them because their pedagogy mirrors the creativity allowed by Web 2.0. Voicethread is an obvious example; teachers can upload images for students to describe, and then students can listen to the responses of their classmates and their teacher. Voicethread can also be used for digital storytelling, so students can create their own narrated fairy tales, myths, and short stories.

Then there is Vozme, an amazing web site for Spanish teachers. Teachers or students can copy and paste or type Spanish text into the web site and then hear it read back to them. I am told by many Spanish teachers that the reader’s voice is terrific, absolutely perfect Spanish. Students can copy in segments of papers they are writing to hear them spoken aloud, or teachers can copy and paste an article from a Spanish newspaper, or a poem, or a section of a novel for students to read and listen to simultaneously. The sound files can be saved as mp3 to be downloaded into an ipod or e-mailed to others.

Yet one more interesting site is Overstream. Overstream allows students and teachers to add subtitles to youtube videos. Students can provide the foreign language text for a French or Spanish video, or they can mute the sound of a commercial, music video clip, or coming attraction of a movie to provide foreign language subtitles. Easy and very cool!

November 19, 2007

Some Cool Web 2.0 Sites- Delicious to start

Filed under: Web 2.0 — @ 11:10 am

The abundance of cool web 2.0 sites can be overwhelming, so I thought I might highlight a useful dozen or so over the next few posts. For those of you unclear as to the meaning of web 2.0, these sites are designed for easy interaction, allowing you to create content on-line.One of the more popular sites is Delicious, a social bookmarking site. At first, I was not that thrilled with delicious, but as I used it more, I began to appreciate it. Here is a slideshow created by Sam Schalman-Bergen for Summercore:

[slideshare id=171995&doc=delicious-1195485905226551-4&w=425]

First off, Delicious is a great place to back up all of your bookmarks; everyone backs up their files, but if you lost your laptop, wouldn’t you be crushed if you lost all your favorites from Internet Explorer or Safari or Firefox. Delicious provides that backup. You can then access your bookmarks(favorites) from any computer. But it is much more than a backup location: it is social bookmarking. So what does social bookmarking mean? First off, it means that you can share your bookmarks (all or just a selected group) with friends, family, colleagues and students. One classroom use of delicious is a group research project, allowing students or you to post good web sites. Students can write descriptions of the web sites they chose as part of a media literacy project.But there is even more. Social bookmarking allows you to view the bookmarks of others, so you can search for a specific topic to see if others have created a useful list, saving you the time.Then there is the advantage of tags. Tags is the web 2.0 word for categories. The advantage to normal saving of bookmarks or favorites within your web browser is that you can easily and quickly add multiple tags to each bookmark. Why is this good? Then you can easily find and sort your bookmarks. For instance, in my browser, I have a category for Web 2.0 sites, but in delicious, I can tag then as Web 2.0 plus education, plus integration, plus graphics, plus video, etc.I am now convinced that delicious is worth the time.

Even More on Google Earth

Filed under: Google Earth — @ 10:01 am

Google is constantly finetuning Google Earth, so each time you open the application and it connects to the GE server, you might find a surprise. The newest features is real weather info, terrific for those of you who do weather units in Science class. The Weather option has three layers: cloud cover in real-time, doppler radar, and weather and temperature conditions. This feature could also be useful at election time; imagine using the weather to predict voter turnout.

I am also constantly finding terrific KML overlays created by other users that can then be integrated into classroom content. My recent finds are one on the Bayeaux Tapestry, one on the spread of the Black Death, and another on population growth throughout the world. Two sites to find these files are The Google Earth Gallery and Google Earth Community Forums.

I worked with one teacher who came up with a great lesson plan for Ancient Egypt. We flew to the Ancient Pyramids and zoomed in on them in 3-D. Then she zoomed out to show the contrast between the desert location of the Pyramids and the fertile Nile Valley and to discuss the rationale for the location of the Pyramids. We then downloaded from the Google Earth Gallery a great KML file on King Tut’s tomb. The best part was that we planned the lesson in one forty minute meeting and she used in for the next class. She was thrilled.

October 15, 2007

More on Google Earth

Filed under: Google Earth — @ 11:02 pm

As you probably have guessed, I am obsessed with Google Earth. I read Google Earth blogs, search for KLM files, and try to come up with lessons to integrate GE into the curriculum. One recent innovation is the addition of youtube videos geotagged throughout Google Earth. To explore this new layer, go to the Featured Content section and choose the youtube layer. Then when you zoom in, you will see links to thousands of videos. But be careful because the videos are of varying quality and some of them might be about Grandpa Sam visiting Paris. 

September 26, 2007

New Version of Google Earth

Filed under: Google Earth — @ 4:00 pm

Be sure to upgrade to GE 4.2 because GE  has now gone into the skies; a new icon appears on the toolbar that changes Google Earth to Google Sky. You can view the sky with constellation names on, with tours of the solar systems, and many other cool features. The new version also allows embedding youtube videos into the pop-up balloons (for PC users only, so far); it also has a hidden flight simulator which is accessed by  typing CTRL-ALT-A on a Windows machine and on the Mac, type  Command+Option+A. I haven’t gotten the hang of using this yet, but the video below makes it seem very cool: 

September 23, 2007

Google Earth in the classroom

Filed under: Google Earth, Web 2.0 — @ 8:16 pm

Google Earth–and the ability to easily create tours with Google Maps–lends itself to many curriculum uses. In a literature class, teachers and/or students can create a guided tour of the main character’s journey, highlighting each stop along the way with quotations from the novel, descriptions of the stop and its relationship to the novel’s themes, pictures evocative of the spot’s symbolic or thematic significance, a discussion of the character’s growth, and links to interesting web resources. In foreign language classes, students and teachers can create guided tours of a city, or a scavenger hunt, or a recreation of where in the world is carmen sandiego with clues in each pop-up balloon. Foreign language teachers can also have students visit a city and then find cafes, cinemas, restaurants, etc. and provide them with a budget to spend for a one-day visit. Students can write an essay determining the best spot for a new hotel based on GE research about local attractions, subway stops, and amenities. Younger students can create a tour of a particular country. History students can create tours tracing the journeys of great explorers or the conquests of emperors or the key battles in a war. Study latitude and longitude with a treasure hunt. The possibilities are endless.   Here is a youtube video with some suggestions about using Google Earth in the classroom:  

September 12, 2007

Try Voicethreads

Filed under: Web 2.0, Web sites — @ 11:37 am

Voicethread allows you to upload images; then different students can record their comments for each image, creating a slideshow with many commentaries. Students can also add written responses. Foreign language teachers, lower school teachers, and english teachers will particularly like this site, but history, science and math teachers can create interesting Voicethread slideshows. The site has tutorials and suggestions for using a voicethread in the classroom Try it.

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