Monday, February 22, 2010

RSS Feed

I am following 12 different sites on my Google Feeder Reader. At first I didn't know what I was really looking for when I searched for sites. Because I am a nursing major I started off searching for nursing sites. I subscribed to several of the nursing sites because some had potential job opportunities and current issues in nursing. When I started thinking more from an educators perspective I searched for lesson plans. I subscribed to an anatomy and some biology science lesson planning sites. I started thinking about how my high school biology teacher always used to have these new interesting topics that related to what we were learning about in biology. To get current topics on science I subscribed to several science journals including the New York Times and PBS.

I chose the sites I did based on the number of other subscribers listed, and also based on how often new material was published from that site. I stayed away from the sites that rarely published material or that had less than 100 subscribers. I searched for PBS because in my past learning experiences they have always provided amazing videos and documentaries.

I did not find this exercise too difficult. I was a little confused at first as to what types of sites I was going to be searching for. Once I started thinking about newspapers and journals that post weekly articles, that's when I started to find A ton of useful material. I guess sifting through the different sites to find a good one was the most time consuming part.

As a teacher a feeder reader could be extremely beneficial for both teaching and learning. For me, if I were teaching a biology class, I could easily pull up relevant current events in science to supplement my lesson planning. I could also follow the lesson planning sites to find new ways to make my lessons more interesting. I could have my students join a feeder reader and have them pull up current events on a topic we learn in class. This could be a fun class project! What made freshman year high school biology so interesting to me was that our teacher was always showing us articles about how they were using all of these new technologies in the medical fields. That has been my all time favorite class and with a feeder reader its really easy to keep up with all this cool new science stuff!

What I want to know more about feeder readers is how to better organize all of my different feeds. It was pretty easy sorting through the information with only 12 feeds but if I had a ton more it might get a bit frustrating. Also, I would like to know if we can share the sites we are getting feeds from with someone else or if someone can view or subscribe to my feeds.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Access

As shown in the readings, socioeconomic status affects access to the internet and social media. There is a technology gap based on socioeconomic status which prohibits many without the funds to have access to the internet. The first article showed a significant gap between income and access to the internet. Because the article was written in 2002, I am curious as to what those numbers would be today. It would not surprise me if those numbers had already drastically increased. As far as income affecting social media groups I do not totally agree with what the last article was saying. I think one of the main differences in Facebook and Myspace users is age, not income. Most everyone I knew in high school was on Myspace, and as soon as we found out about Facebook from older siblings or other friends, everyone began to shift to Facebook, regardless of socioeconomic status. I guess though, that manny began to switch to Facebook when they got to college, and if people couldn't afford to go to college, then maybe that is why they never really caught on to the Facebook trend. Twitter on the other hand, I associate more with upper class because of its popularity with celebrities like Ashton Kutcher and John Mayer.

Access to social media and the internet are extremely important in this increasingly developing world. As much as I like to fight this, the world just keeps moving faster and faster and if you don't have the means to technology, you can't keep up with it. To deny people who are already of lower socioeconomic statuses access to these technologies would only put them lower and lower economically. Most every high paying job requires use of the internet and other social media.

I find that it could be difficult to support students without access to the internet at home. Because knowing how to use technology and social media is becoming necessary to survive economically in this world, I would have to somehow teach my students how to use it while in the classroom. There would have to be a lot of collaboration with other teachers and fund raising to help my students have access to the internet. I would hope that my school would have a computer lab, and if so, I would fully utilize that lab whenever possible and make sure students have access to that lab. Its sad to think that a huge chunk of students don't have computers or access to the internet at home like I always have. I can not imagine surviving without my computer and feel that in the past it may have been a luxury, but now it is becoming more of a necessity.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Participatory Culture--The New Literacy

These were very interesting readings which are extremely applicable to the way students are learning with new technology.

1. Features of participatory culture that were evident in the the Networked Student Video were mostly, well, all of the them. I was extremely impressed with the initiative of the student and his curiosity to learn the way he did. With the layout of his class there was no printed textbook, and it was mostly online. The student learns to use judgment in finding scholarly and dependable resources with good content. He also uses negotiation, especially when he goes so far as to contact the author of a work he liked and collaborated to have a skype interview with the author for his class. He was also collaborative with his use of social bookmarking, where he shared useful links and found useful links as well. He used blogs online collaboratively as a way of circulation, where he spurred discussion and further learning of himself and his peers. I was very proud of this student for his the amount of work he did in this class, and the fact that he was only in high school. I thought, however, that the element of play was missing from this mode of learning. There could have been online games that the teacher could create or find to help with the learning process. But maybe the teacher wanted the students to find those types of learning games on the internet on their own. While watching the video, I was worried about whether they would actually need a teacher with this new style of learning. I was quickly reaffirmed when they directly addressed my question: yes, a teacher is present. I think though, that the role of the teacher changes in this context, as more of a guide to finding content rather than directly teaching content.

2. The learning experience of the student looks extremely different than what I was used to in high school. Only in college have a I started to use blogging, social bookmarking and the internet for online texts. In my school, the most technology I used was watching videos on YouTube, and I did a podcast once my senior year. I think the reasons that learning is so different is because of the participation gap. In high school, not everyone had access to the internet all of the time, or even knew how to properly use the technology. The teachers were not trained either as to how to use these technologies in their lesson planning. I think these new technologies will create a student that will have to do more work to find the information they need to learn. This takes a lot of initiative and curiosity on the part of the student, as does reading from a boring textbook. For me personally, I like the old style of learning because I am afraid of technology at times. As I have witnessed with my 8 year old cousins though, I am going to have to catch up with the rest of the world. My cousins will enjoy this type of learning because it is more relevant to them. They already know how to upload songs on iPods and download games off the internet. How fast things change!

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Critical Thinking and Problem Sovling

Part One
Example Learning Objective: The student will learn the major parts of the brain

Knowledge: The student will learn the anatomical terms regarding the brain.
Understanding: The students will learn the physiology of the different terms of the brain
Application: The students will see how these anatomical parts are studied by doctors, psychologists, biologist

Analysis/Synthesis: Students will be able to write down each part of the brain and how they work in conjunction with each other

Evaluating: Students can dissect a brain (maybe a sheep brain in a lab) and be able to identify what that brain has in common with the human brain. (Why didn't I think of this for my lesson plan!!!???)

Creating: Students will have to create a model of the human brain, using whatever materials they like

Part Two
Even though the teacher mentioned this point several times in the class it does not surprise me that the students did not remember this on their final exam. First of all the way he taught the students, even though he used a demonstration, did not answer the question as to why it was hotter in the summer. After reading his explanation myself, it was unclear to me exactly why it was hotter in the summer due to the angle of the sun as opposed to the earth being closer to the sun in the summer. The students may have been paying attention but were just unable to fully understand what the teacher was trying to say. If the concept was so important than the teacher should have assessed the students understanding of the concept prior to the final exam. He could also ask other more experienced teachers on how to better get that concept across to the students.