Sunday 29 July 2012

Digital Native Podcast


Mark Prensky is credited with coining the term “digital native” to describe any individual that was born into a media-rich environment. Prensky (2001) explained that a digital native is also a “native speaker of the digital language of computers, video games, and the Internet.” In this podcast, I take a look at my own personal technology use as a 29 year old teacher. According to Prensky’s criteria, I am a digital native myself. However, I recognize drastic differences between the characteristics of my technology use and those of other digital natives born more recently. The second portion of this podcast includes an interview with my younger sister, Annie. Annie is eight years younger than me, and certainly meets all of the criteria to be considered a digital native. Listening to both of our answers showcases the drastic development of digital and Internet-based technology that occurred between my birth and that of my sister. Though there are only eight years separating us, the amount of technology we were each exposed to during our childhoods had a definite effect on the individuals we were to become. I have no doubt that these differences would be amplified should I have been able to interview one of my current students, who has had that much more of a technology and media-rich childhood than either Annie or I.


References:

Prensky, M. (2001a). Digital natives, digital immigrants. On the Horizon, 9(5).      

Wednesday 18 July 2012

21st Century Skills


As today’s individuals leave the realm of formal schooling and enter the work world, they require a specific set of skills and competencies to meet the expectations of their potential employers and exist as productive, contributing members of society. These 21st century skills include core subjects and 21st century themes, learning and innovation skills, information, media, and technology skills, and life and career skills (P21, 2011).   

Core Subjects and 21st Century Themes
·       Core subjects include: English, reading or language arts, world languages, arts, mathematics, economics, science, geography, history, government, and civics
·       Global awareness
·       Financial, Economic, Business, and Entrepreneurial Literacy
·       Civic Literacy
·       Health Literacy
·       Environmental Literacy
Learning and Innovation Skills
·       Creativity and Innovation
·       Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
·       Communication and Collaboration
Information, Media and Technology Skills
·       Information Literacy
·       Media Literacy
·       ICT (Information, Communications and Technology) Literacy
Life and Career Skills
·       Flexibility and Adaptability
·       Initiative and Self-Direction
·       Social and Cross-Cultural Skills
·       Productivity and Accountability
·       Leadership and Responsibility
The Partnership for 21st Century Skills website is a fantastic resource for educators, parents, and policy makers. It is a well-organized and visually appealing collection of information, links, articles, and videos pertaining to the implementation of these skills. The website provides information on the various organizations and individuals that have collaborated with the United States Department of Education in the creation of this coalition. It includes representatives from many respected organizations, such as AOL Time Warner Foundation, Apple Computer, Inc., Cisco Systems, Inc., Microsoft Corporation, and the National Education Association.

              The mission of this partnership is “to serve as a catalyst to position 21st century readiness at the center of US K12 education by building collaborative partnerships among education, business, community, and government leaders”(P21, 2011). This group believes that the U.S. education system can “keep up by fusing the 3Rs and 4Cs (critical thinking and problem solving, communication, collaboration, and creativity and innovation)” (P21, 2011). In this example, the 3Rs represent the core subjects. Links from the website allow you to view the specific state initiatives of the sixteen P21 Leadership States. These states have made a commitment toward incorporating the 21st century skills into their statewide curriculum.

              I found this website to provide a wealth of knowledge. As an educator in one of the sixteen P21 Leadership States, the topic of 21st century skills and dispositions has been at the forefront of recent curricular discussions. In fact, last year, I sat on two separate curriculum-mapping committees.  As a part of these committees, my team came up with ideas for the incorporation of the 21st century themes. I regret not having access to this website during the process, as I feel it would have been a wonderful asset.

              One aspect of the website that I found especially interesting and thought provoking was the Critical Skills Survey presented under the “What Employers Say” section. This survey provided data from employers across the county on the skills they require of their employees and those they expect to require in coming years. It also showed the lack of these necessary skills that employers are reporting in their current staff and those applying for positions within their companies. This data was motivating to see because the correlation between the 21st century skills and those being reported as necessary was very apparent. We, as educators, hold the responsibility of preparing our students for the future. Here we can see evidence of what they will need and support for helping prepare them for it. After viewing this data, it becomes clearly imperative to incorporate these skills into my instruction.

              I had a very difficult time finding information or an opinion on the site that I disagreed with. However, I did find one area in which more development is needed. The section in need of improvement deals with 21st century assessments. The coalition has determined that assessing the 21st century skills is the “essential foundation” of this type of education (P21, 2011). They explain that the assessments must use modern technologies to be “effective, sustainable, and affordable,” and they must measure the five areas of core subjects, 21st century content, learning skills, ICT literacy, and life skills (P21, 2011). While the Partnership has outlined that schools should use a “balance of assessments, including high-quality standardized testing, along with effective classroom testing” (P21, 2011), they do not get into the specifics of their recommended assessments. They do not suggest the creation of a universal standardized test, nor do they share ideas for different types of effective classroom assessments. In an earlier course, though my Walden University program, we learned about the effectiveness of planning with the end result in mind. I understand that the partnership has identified the end dispositions and skills that students should possess, but it does not appear that they have clearly identified how they would like students to prove this possession.

              Through reading the course resources and exploring the Partnership for 21st Century Skills website, I have been convinced of the necessity of including these skills in my instruction. The combination of teaching these skills through the framework of the existing content material will help to prepare my students for their futures. Collaboration across the subject areas and the utilization of technology and project-based learning will help to meet all of the standards’ requirements. The length of the school year will not change, but as a teacher, I have now been challenged even more to increase the quality and quantity of learning my students receive.



References

The Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2011). The partnership for 21st century skills [Website]. Retrieved from http://www.p21.org.

Wednesday 4 July 2012

The Use of Blogs in My Classroom


The creation and use of blogs in my fifth-grade language arts and science classroom was something that I implemented during the last school year. I actually used three different blogs to meet various classroom needs, two of which were open to the public and accessible through a link from the school website. A personal Weebly website was used to maintain two of my three blogs. I called one blog “Classroom News,” and utilized it to preserve an open line of communication with my class parents. I posted announcements about upcoming events and photographs of field trips and classroom happenings to this blog, and I received many comments back from students and their parents. I updated this blog on an as-needed basis. The second blog on my Weebly website was a weekly homework blog. Updates were made to this blog each weekend for the upcoming week of school, and the blog served to provide my class with an estimated view of the weekly homework assignments. I clearly explained to my students, both in class and on the blog, that the blog entry was just a prediction of the week’s homework assignments. They were forewarned that there would be times and situations where the assignments would be changed in class, and that, when in doubt, they should go by what was written in their daily agenda book for the day. Students and parents expressed thankfulness in having the blog as a way to look ahead at the week’s responsibilities and as something to fall back on if they forgot their agenda book at school.

              The third blog that I utilized last year was generated through the Kidblog website. This website allowed me to create a class set of blogs, one for each student, in which I was the administrator. The blogs were customizable, and I had them set up so that they were only accessible to members of our class. All blog posts and comments required my approval before they appeared on the blogs. I mainly used this blog as a way for my students to become familiar with blogging and to respond to literature based writing prompts. Students generally answered a question about the novel we were working on, and then, as the year progressed, began commenting on one another’s posts.  In my experience last year, these student blogs highlighted the powerful effect blogging can have on the development of writing and the depth of literary connections made by students. The majority of my students showed a greater interest in improving their writing skills when contributing to their blogs. My more introspective students were able to voice their opinions and ideas in a manner in which they felt comfortable. Overall, blogging was an entertaining, engaging, and valuable way to infuse 21st century skills into the reading and writing curriculum.

              During this upcoming school year, I would like to continue the use of all three of my blogs. Through reading the assigned chapters of Richardson’s Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms, I have become aware of the fact that the majority of my personal blog use has come through posting, instead of true blogging. I do still plan to utilize my classroom update and homework blogs in the same manner as this year, but will try to encourage more input from my students. However, in order to integrate more student blogging, it is my intention to develop further the use of my students’ “kidblogs” and to incorporate blogging across a wider variety of curricular areas. One specific idea that I have for implementing this is to have my students use their blogs in science class as we conduct a class-wide experiment. During fifth-grade, science students are introduced to the scientific method through a scaffolded class-wide project. They conduct this experiment together so that they are exposed to the experience and develop knowledge on the process that they can use during individual formal experiments later in middle school. By recording their results online, I hope to see my students put forth more effort and have an increase in conversations that occur regarding the experiment. This blog could also represent a resource that could be used in the future. Should students need a refresher as they work independently, they could go back to the blog to view their own individual model of the process. Science teachers out there, have you ever tried using a blog to document a science experiment? Do you have any ideas or suggestions for doing so?



References

Richardson, W. (2010). Blogs, wikis, podcasts, and other powerful web tools for classrooms (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.


Sunday 1 July 2012

Introduction

Welcome! My name is Liza Narducci, and I currently teach fifth grade language arts and science in New Jersey. I hope to use this blog to discuss the practical applications of new technology in the classroom setting. I would also love to hear from you. Please feel free to share your thoughts, ideas, and suggestions with me as we discuss innovative new approaches to teaching!