Monday, November 23, 2015

Congratulations! Final Citizenship Awards

Congratulations to these outstanding students that support our class community.  Below each name is a quote from one nomination.


Community Builders:

  • Kristen

Kristen is super helpful and always very friendly. She even brought me cookies to class once! She always is great at helping when I am confused too.

  • Meghan
(Received several nominations but comments sections were blank)
Tech Helper:

  • Jamie Glass
She helped me with the excel project and she is really nice!
  • Jessica Warsheski
While we were at practice she would talk about what we did in class so that we could double check that we both knew what we were doing. I had a rough time with twitter and Jessica would answer any of my questions about it even if i asked the same question a million times.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Great Reflections from Your Posts

As I was reading your final Blog Post #10, I copied some of your reflections to guide next semester's class.  At the time, I didn't credit the author because I was most interested in your ideas.  So I'm going to share your quotes without crediting you, (sorry), but they reflect sentiments expressed by several of you.

My favorite blog posts were the Slideshare Powerpoint tips we all posted. Those are much easier to pay attention to than reading a long, boring, drawn out list of ways to spice up a presentation. I had never used or heard of Slideshare until that day in class and now I feel like I see it everywhere. They're a great tool for keeping mundane information interesting.  (Common Comment)

I am completely amazed at how much I learned from this week's interactive PowerPoint assignment. I created a Jeopardy game using a template I found online and what seemed like an assignment that was going to be a bit annoying and completely daunting turned out to be really enjoyable!   (Common comment)

Another thing that always interested me was when we would all post screenshots of the finished product of our assignments. I loved looking at everything that was created and gathering ideas from those to use in the future. It was always inspiring to see how amazingly well some people had designed their assignments and made me want to strive to reach that standard myself.

The two things I liked reading about the most were the concept maps and the PowerPoint video tutorials. The concept map was one of my favorite projects in this class, and I loved seeing how other classmates created concepts maps to different subjects. That's another thing I liked seeing; how we all took the same concept of the assignments but applied them to different subjects and grade levels. 

(Interactive Power Point) was not as difficult as I assumed it would be, because of the fun templates we downloaded. Actually, I had no idea that you could download templates in the first place.  (Common sentiment).

Thank you for your ideas!  

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Participate in These Two Surveys

Take both surveys below.  Pay attention to how the questions are formatted.  You will be creating a Qualtrics survey in class today.

Topic:  Excel (Your experiences so we can refine today's lesson based on your needs).


Topic:  Social Media Use (Helping another student)



Monday, November 9, 2015

Do All Teachers Use Technology?

My experience as the gal on campus who leads technology and professional development is most teachers do not authentically integrate technology.  By authentic, I mean technology becomes invisible.  Computers are tools like a pen and paper.  Whenever the task would be made more effective or efficient with technology, with the RIGHT technology, it is.  Philosophically, the classes are student-centered, not teacher-centered, (again, when appropriate), and projects are frequent.

Many teachers who do use technology are caught in one type of technology.  My experience in schools is perhaps only a quarter of the teachers use all three kinds of technology:


If you were a parent, would you want to keep your fingers crossed that your child was in a class whose teacher uses technology?  As a nation, don't we want ALL students technology literate?

There are award-winning schools in the nation where every teacher on campus integrates technology appropriately.  What can we learn from these schools?

Hence, the (current) focus of my doctoral research:

"What administrative policies and practices affect classroom technology integration?"

Levin and Schrum (2013) researched 12 technology award-winning schools (ISTE, Apple awards, etc), and found these common factors which need to be implemented simultaneously.  The researchers and administrators suggest that failure to develop even one of these factors impacts the entire system and universal integration is less likely.


  1. a clearly stated vision cross-checked with all school initiatives,
  2. distributed leadership, 
  3. a school culture consisting of an expectation to trying new technology and an acceptance of trial and error, 
  4. a technology implementation plan and technical support, 
  5. professional development, 
  6. teacher-developed technology-instruction infused into the existing curriculum, 
  7. funding from creative sources, and 
  8. partnerships with families, local businesses, and higher education institutions   
Think of your high school.  While as a student you may not know all the behind-the-scenes policies that made your school tick, you how often you used technology and for what purpose.

Post a comment about your experiences in high school with the three kinds of technology and possibly what you know about the administrative system.


Levin, B. B., & Schrum, L. (2013). Using systems thinking to leverage technology for school improvement: lessons learned from award-winning secondary schools/districts. Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 46(1), 29-54. Retrieved from http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA349903220&v=2.1&u=tall85761&it=r&p=EAIM&sw=w&asid=bb584ca3411e36808325d72455e28274

Sunday, October 25, 2015

2014 Students "Speak Up" on Their Digital Desires and Use

Respond to the survey image below:

  • Which results surprise you?
  • What are implications for education?








































  • http://www.tomorrow.org/speakup/pdfs/SU14_Flyer_StudentTop10_Print.pdf

    Wednesday, October 21, 2015

    Good Citizenship Awards



    Community Builders:

    • Becca
    "I always see Becca going above and beyond online. She always tweets, comments on blog posts and is usually the first to post hers every week."

    • Julia 
    "She frequently tweets to the class hashtag & often responds to others while on Twitter."

    Tech Helpers:


    • Karissa
    "Whenever I have have a question about an assignment, I'll DM Karissa on our class twitter and she always is willing to help. When I missed part of class that one week she was able to give me clear instruction on what to do and helped me tremendously."

    • Emily 
    "Emily always helps me with my assignments when I am confused and she shows me the proper techniques to complete the assignment. Emily also has a very good attitude when she comes to class and always comments on my blog posts to give me more constructive criticism.On my blog titled "1 The Importance of Technology", Emily commented on my blog talking about my comparative skills within my blog, which I have continuously used in other blog posts."




    Sunday, October 18, 2015

    PISA - International Student Assessment

    PISA is a well-respected international study of 15 year olds across the globe on achievement, demographics, and more recently, computer use.  It is conducted every three years.  What do you think about this infographic based on the 2012 results?

    Monday, October 5, 2015

    Feedback on Newsletter Assignment

    Here are your comments from the newsletter assignment survey.  It seems you all enjoyed viewing each other's creativity.  Our next "Best in Show" viewing will be website design.  Don't worry, no coding needed.  Many of the "likes" below will apply in the web environment.

    I loved the nautical theme and how the pictures and text correlated with kindergarten very well.
    The design, detail and effort!
    i loved the border and how everything tied back to the whale theme. it was creative and well executed
     I really liked all the themes and bright colors on everyone's newsletter! I loved seeing how creative everyone got!
    Colorful, creativity, easy to read, neat
    I enjoyed the files with fonts that didn't clash, many students put too many fonts all together. I also looked for color, picture quality, clipart & general aesthetic.
    Amazing graphic design. I love how intricate and well planned out it is. Great Job! 
    This was a very good newsletter. I could tell she worked really hard on it and if I was a parent, I would love to receive a newsletter as elaborate and put together as this.
    Colorful photos, borders, not super cluttered but well filled up. Everything has a purpose, not just put on to fill space.
    The graphic design is very detailed
    A lot of people got very creative with their borders and clip art that made their letters more fun to read.
     Most newsletters were colorful and attention-grabbing.
    I liked all the organization and the different stories that people came up with to put on their newsletter.
    I liked the different graphics people were able to put onto their newsletters, and how people were able to incorporate so many different designs into them.
    I really liked the colors some of them used they really popped.
    I liked the variety of spelling lists as well as the color coordination and the use of clip art.

    Sunday, September 27, 2015

    Why aren't technology tools listed in the standards?

    As you read the Common Core ELA standards, you may wonder why tool categories aren't listed in the standards?  You will find no reference to word processing, digital video, or blogs.  After viewing the image below, do you think the standards are too specific or too general?  Will they remain pertinent over time, as technologies develop?  How would you change them?


    Thursday, September 17, 2015

    How do young children cite their sources? A Word Worksheet

    In your blogs, many of you tussled with the difference between copyright and plagiarism.  Remember these are two separate issues.  Copyright is solely about whether the USE qualifies as "fair."  Citing sources relates to license requirements (attribution in Creative Commons) and academic ethics.

    You may be wondering, can young students cite their sources?  Yes!

    Below are worksheets I made for  students to cite their sources in research projects that also include online and print research and digital projects that use digital media.  These Sources Pages work!  I have used them with hundreds of students.

    I made these templates in Word.  Can you see the various features I used?

    1st Grade
    4th-5th Grade


    Sunday, September 13, 2015

    Pictures, Music, & Video - Better than Copyright!

    What if my project doesn't qualify for fair use?  Where do I get my pictures, music and video?

    I thought you'd never ask :)

    Here is a symbaloo webmix of links with digital media that have licenses permitting more liberal use.  Perfect for fun videos, blogs, and presentations you want to publish on the web.

    Check it out:


    Thursday, September 3, 2015

    Great Quotes of the Week

    Your week 1 blogs were such a joy to read.  Here are some highlights of your insights. Comment on their thoughts...

    RedGuy2018
    "The differences that I have seen between myself and most of my teachers who are digital immigrants are that they pay attention to the small things about technology, and they take more time when working with it."

    Jessica's Blog
    "Even though people tend to believe that the older generation or the generation of our teachers is falling behind ours I don't believe this to be true."

    Kristen's EME2040 Blog
    "Watching teachers with a problem is always nerve-wracking because sometimes they start clicking random buttons and other times they call in reinforcements, even when it turns out to be nothing serious."

    Karissa's Blog EME2040
    "Technology is changing every day, and if you don't keep up with the advances, you will get lost in the past."

    Becca's Blog
    "In the chapter there were four challenges outlined: finances to provide educational technology, time to learn to use technology and teach about it, school culture allowing the technology, and the shift from teacher to facilitator of learning."

    Elizabeth Bennet
    "The added structure of regulated lesson plans and standards may seem redundant or boring but in reality, they add supportive structures to an otherwise hectic ideal."

    Ashley Shaw - EME2040
    "My main concern about teachers using technology in the classroom is that they are going to teach students how to use it instead of actually having them use it for an assignment."

    Em's EME
    "The difference between my teachers and myself is that they saw technology as an optional tool while I saw it as a necessary tool."

    Sunday, August 30, 2015

    Check Us Out! We are so techie.

    Here are our class responses to this week's poll:  How do you communicate/publish online?  Looks like we don't have many gamers in the group.  But there's a lot of experience in this class.  Thanks for playing.



    Monday, August 24, 2015

    0 A bit about me

    As a school librarian, I have been teaching students utilizing technology for 18 years.  With 125 students and 6 classes a day, I've been afforded a lot of opportunity to try new tools and have learned its okay to take risks knowing new units may ultimately fail.

    The other part of my job is to provide professional development for teachers, much of it on technology.  I have been professional development contact at two schools, have presented more than 50 workshops in eight Florida counties, and have provided 28 webinars for organizations reaching 70% of Florida school districts.

    Personally, I am still growing with tech.  This summer I took Dr. Dennen's Web 2.0 and Web Analytics classes.  I've learned how to create a PLN (personal learning network) and how to track and understand data that web hits produce.

    Through this course, I hope you all will teach me some new tech tools and uses for those tools.  Many of you are on the cutting edge of what's new and cool.  Please speak up in class, (in a kind, gentle manner), to say, "We don't really use xyz anymore.  Now we use abc."

    I truly hope you enjoy this class and, if nothing else, you learn that you as a teacher are responsible for providing a 21st century education for your students.  I have seen too many teachers think that the standard curriculum is enough.  It's not!