Thursday, July 22, 2010

Course Summary

I am tired--but excited! There are too many things that I learned to list what I received from each one. Besides, there's too much to go back to that I didn't explore as fully as I would have liked. Kudos to the staff for offering true diversified learning instead of the follow-me that I received in other technology courses. Yes, Yes, Yes, I would enroll in another course of this type.

In six weeks (that seem short now that I'm finished) I have reconnected with my extended family through Facebook, I have created documents through Google Docs to use next year, I have started a wiki to share with my fellow math teachers on our campus, I have found a plethora of sites where I can connect with Special ed. teachers or math teachers to help with diversity in my classroom, and I know where to go to get help or inspiration when I need it. That's just a small part of what I will take with me from this course

Thank You!!!!!!!!!!!

Thing #23

I think I may have enjoyed this "thing" the most and you can color me surprised. In joining Facebook, I have more mail than I can say grace over in just 24 hours. I can't believe that it actually excited my children, sister, and various and sundry cousins. I haven't even told them all that I'm on yet!

In the 23rd thing, I found that Facebook has groups of teachers that I can collaborate with to further my technology skills or to share classroom resources or tips. That will be easy to keep up with--can't wait to join a group.

I'm still waiting for my membership in Classroom 2.0 to be approved, but that site also has groups that would be fun to participate in.

I'm still thinking about how to use these sites with my students. I've toyed with the idea of inviting my students to join me on Facebook. I can see how this might help me connect to them on a level other than the classroom thus helping to build relationships. I can also see how I might come to regret the action--we'll see. Again, there are sites on Facebook that will give me suggestions on how to involve my students.

Thing 7b

While visiting my google reader, I found an article on what to expect when the court begins to examine Arizona's immigration stance. I'm sure many Americans are like me--confused. According to the article, the Supreme Court has already ruled that "federal authority can pre-empt state law when the federal interest is dominant and where there already exists a system of federal regulations."

I have wondered why there was such a big deal and the article went on to say that it doesn't matter that the federal government hasn't done a good job in enforcing the immigration laws, it only matters that the laws are in place.

I look forward to hearing the news today.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Thing #22

MySpace and Facebook are areas that are so foreign to me that I always think "what's the point?" My children, my sister, my sister-in-law all wanted me to join so I guess I'm glad I did for that reason. I have to admit, though, that the first thing I did was Google the security issues which were huge--kind of scares me. Also, I find it kind of scary for people I went to high school with 40 years ago to find me--what could we possibly have in common? I'm one of those people who went to 12 schools before I graduated high school--I'm used to moving on.

I'm not sure I would want to use either of these social networks for my students in teaching math. I really feel that too much time is wasted in a day with these sites--much like gaming. My children tell me of students who spent so much time on these sites that they failed out of school. The one useful feature I found on facebook (and I assume MySpace has the same feature) was the ability to connect to other special education teachers.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Thing #21

Thing 21 was interesting and I found that I had already started a calendar for my summer classes so I just finished it--daunting schedule! I had also used Picassa when I did the pictures for my collage and slide show. I got into iGoogle and made a web page but would really like to spend more time with it and see how I might customize it more. It has more "junk" in it than I would like.

Google has a lot of tools--some good and some not so good. As a teacher I will definitely use the Picassa tool and add more and more math pictures to use in math papers that I create. I'm really scared any more of using student pictures for anything. The calendar will come in handy next year in lieu of a hand written copy. I wish I had my printer here at home so I could print some of these things to see what they look like offline. IGoogle is just fun and it may be fun to have it come up--I can see the temperature and any breaking news before I come home in the evening.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Thing 20

This "thing" will eventually be useful but will take some work to find everything. In my profession of teaching math, I don't create very many word documents. I tried creating a math worksheet and could not find the math symbols (I assume they are there somewhere). Finally, I decided to work on my teacher letter that goes home with the kids on the first day of school. I used a newsletter template and it looks alright for a first draft. I'm sure something will need to be changed before it's time to send it out.


Welcome to Mrs. Peters' Basic Math Class




August 23, 2010



News Flash!

We use calculators in our class. Your student will have homework and will need a calculator for homework. Please do not buy an expensive calculator! If it will add, subtract, multiply and divide, it will be adequate. Walmart usually sells them for under $5.00. They will also use a calculator on TAKS.





School Supplies


There won't be a lot of supplies to purchase for my class. Mostly, each student should have a pencil every day. Not having a pencil was quite a problem last year. Students will also need paper for every class. I do not purchase tissue. I hope that each student can bring a box. Lastly, each student is expected to have a binder with index tabs to hold information for all their classes.



Inspiration!


GO MCDONALD MUSTANGS


It's Fall Again!

Another summer has passed, our kids are another year older--we won't talk about what happened to us in that time (ha,ha).

I'll take just a little time to tell you about me. I'm a 14 year veteran teacher and I'll receive my masters degree in December of this year. I have raised four children ages 29 to 23. The first three are girls and all have college degrees and my youngest is a boy who is serving with the Air Force in Afghanistan.



What's Happening This Year

This year we will use worksheets, computers, and projects to reinforce our math skills. Worksheets will be used in conjunction with notes to learn the basic skills. We have a computer program that will reinforce those skills. Your student will have access to that program from your home computer. If you don't have a home computer, he/she can stay after school to work on the classroom computers. More information on access from home will follow once every student is signed in to the system.



Open House


Middle School will host an Open House on September 16. It usually starts around 6:00 p.m. and runs through 8:00 p.m. (more information on exact times will follow). Please try to come! I'd love to meet you!



Discipline


I try not to need a principal in my discipline program. Most of the time, I am successful. I have found through experience that my students learn best when the class is orderly and quiet. That does not mean that we will not work in groups--sometimes we will. It also doesn't mean that we won't engage in a variety of learning experiences--we will. It does mean that all students will be expected to flow from one activity to another in a way that does not disturb other students and that does not interfere with my ability to teach.

If I find that your student is having a problem controlling his behavior, I hope I can call on you for help. I truly believe that education is a team effort.

The attachment to this newsletter asks for general information that will help me contact you. Please fill out the page and return it to school with your student. I love e-mails, so if you have access to one, please provide that also. Phone calls must happen from time to time, but we all work and I try to keep them to a minimum.





Carol Peters
Basic Math
972-882-5700
cpeters@mesquiteisd.org

I was really disappointed that I could not embed or link the page to my blog and I'm not sure I should have copied/pasted.

The newsletter application was great because it would have taken a special program for me to do it in Word. I will probably use the spreadsheet to track the academic progress for my students. I can also see using excell spreadsheets to track money and permission slips for field trips. That was the one collaborative use I could think of--each teacher on the team could input the data into the document for the students in her home room instead of having to take all the information to the team leader to input.

And, yes, it was very time consuming--but, interesting.

P.S. After viewing this blog post, I see why cut/paste is not a good thing to do. The formatting isn't compatible. Ah Ha!!

Thing #19

I was able to embed a voice thread into the sidebar of my blog and that was empowering. I would really like to come back to this section to see how to make my own voice thread. I tried joining the free group for teachers but was not successful. Next time, I'll join the discussion group and get their advice.

I definitely see benefit in using the voice thread in my classroom as a section wrap-up--every time we learn something new, add a comment about it to the voice thread. By the 6 weeks test, it could be used as a study document--especially since these voice threads can be accessed from home.

If I do my own, I would need to explore the screen. A picture would not be good enough--I would want to create something having to do with the math objective we were exploring at the time. Since we would be adding to it, a slide show seems like it might work. I could add a new slide each time we started something new. Sounds huge, and maybe it's unrealistic. Time will tell.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Thing #18

YouTube and TeacherTube can best be described as "you have to look through a lot of trash to find a treasure."

My excursion through YouTube didn't last long--way to much trash for me. TeacherTube was also full of trash but it was because most of the videos I looked at were very amateur. On my first search, I used the tags free, math, videos, and middle school. I got a lot of trash from elementary, middle school and high school--I guess the middle school tag is "iffy." I got tired of that so I refined my search to include a specific math subject such as Pythagorean Theorum. I think that would be a better set of criteria, but you still have to wade through a great deal of trash.

I like to use videos to introduce or reinforce a lesson just to vary the learning experience. Most of the videos I viewed would not impress my resource math students. If they don't get humor, or learning, or enjoyment of some kind, it's a waste of time.

This is a good resource and I can see math videos getting better as time goes on and more teachers learn to use the resource. This was one of two "things" so far that was not new to me.

Thing #17

Podcasts were confusing to me--I really don't know why you would use the ones I viewed in the math section in a math class. Math factor was a music video and the relation to math was so abstract that my resource math students would not understand the relationship--maybe a few gifted students might. Mathgrad was taught by a college professor and related to college concepts, some that I would have trouble with especially since it was all audio and no pictures or visual explanations at all. The third video was Dansmathcast and again it was college level and without visual explanation.

My students need a great deal of visual and kinestetic stimulation and video does that. I am pretty sure that videos are also a form of podcast because they call TeacherTube a podcast. TeacherTube has videos that are cute, even though you have to look pretty hard to find them in math. I would only use one to vary instruction.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Thing #16

I was kind of glad to find the Library Thing. Every year I go to inservice trainings that share the cutest books that I would like to share with my students and every year the list seems to get lost. I just attended the class "Start Small: Just Don't Stand Still" and I just joined the Library Thing and saved the books I thought my students might like.

Great quick resource!

Thing #15

Delicious was very interesting. I'm not sure how I would use it yet. If my math department chooses to use the math wiki to store teaching tools as a group, then I think the wiki would be the most efficient way to share resources. If not, I will probably use delicious because it would probably be easier to get to in a hurry. Of course, the wiki would have each tool separated by objective, so maybe I'll just use both.

I liked the way I could edit using delicious and I liked the ease of getting to my bookmarks. There are a lot more things I can do with it and I'm sure that will just take practice. My next goal is to see how google reader and delicious can work together to save me time in researching math videos.

All in all, I am learning a great many things in this course that I feel I will be able to use in my classroom next year.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

7a

Since my son deployed to Afghanistan last week, I've been very interested in any news I can get from the region. I have a feed to my reader that gives me all the news. They come under attack at Khandahar every day, so I want to see what General Petreus is planning for the region since he is due to officially take over on Sunday.

The newest post is a speech he gave in Kabul to the troops and to NATO officials where he calls for unity in the region. He seems to be an important player because he did the same thing in Iraq.

Thing #14 (or Thing #12)

I chose to make a web page for my class. My hope is that parents would connect to the web site to see what they need to know to help their student be successful in my class. I chose the Weebly site to make the web page. So far, it is fairly easy to navigate, but I'm sure I will learn more as I go along.

This past year was exciting because most of my students had access to a computer and even more had parents who had access to a computer at work. Each year, the internet becomes a more practical tool for my class. Many of my parents prefer an e-mail to a phone call--as a past parent, this would have been more convenient for me as well.

If this web page works, in addition to class rules and supplies, I could add the math notes that go along with homework assignments so that parents can have access to material they may have forgotten over the years or never learned at all. I truly believe that the parents are the key to teaching today's student--if the parents believe in what we're doing, they will see that their children do also.

Thing #13


My cartoon was taken from the comic generator. This one was easy to create--not so easy to save. All you have to do is choose the comic strip you like and follow the prompts to input the text you like. I saved it to my document file and then couldn't open it. I still don't know why it let me add it to my blog today????

This is a very interesting section. I've never made pictures before or included them in anything I've posted on the internet. This picture was taken from the Shape Collage generator. The only thing I had to do was download the program, drag the pictures to the window, and create the collage. Then I saved the collage to my documents. Many of the pictures I made would not open once I saved them because I didn't have the right programs on my computer. This one was really simple.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Thing #12

This section was relatively easy. I chose to do a slide show on Khandahar, Afghanistan. My son was deployed there last week and I'm trying to get used to the idea. We survived Anaconda, north of Baghdad and I'm sure we'll survive this too. I tried to include pictures of the base, the surrounding area, and some of the people.

Thing #11







This section was certainly full of information--more information than I will be able to digest during this course. I'm still old fashioned in that I keep my photos in albums. The Flickr site alone will take months for me to become proficient with. Groups and Tags were also interesting. If I were to store my pictures online, I'd definitely need these features to be able to find the ones I wanted again.

We were asked to research a theme in Flickr and download photos for this blog entry. This time, the mother in me got the best of the teacher. My son shipped out to Kandahar, Afghanistan last week and I just had to spend time researching pictures of the area to see where he was.

I still do not fully understand the formatting and sizing of the pictures, but I guess that will come with time. PRAY FOR OUR TROOPS!