I am always looking for new ways to engage students and help them learn. One way I have tried and seem to be successful with is incorporating technology. Students love the days I bring in the iPads for class and ask when we will be using them again. In fact, I had them write a comparative essay on two body systems by collecting their research using the iPads. I'm not sure it was ever quieter in my room (other than test days) as students worked diligently to gather their information...to write...which is something previously in the year I had struggled to get accomplished as part of a school wide effort to increase literacy in all subject areas.
This coming year I have many ideas I would like to try to incorporate more technology in and outside of the classroom to increase engagement with science. As part of my licensure program I am taking a course on technology in the classroom. One component of this class is to introduce us to blogging. Our challenge was to find a good example of a teacher blog and talk about that blog. I looked for one that is in my content area of science and is used for a classroom (not just a teacher talking to teachers). I found one by Derrick Willard who used his blog for his AP Environmental Science Courses.
He uses interesting titles, links, and pictures to capture his audience. For example, his June 3rd post has the title "New theme, same blog, old themes". He also has a picture to show what he is talking about and a link to provide examples of his goal. His goal is to use his blog for self-reflection and to use social media with students to increase engagement. His site is clean and easy to read as well as being easy to navigate. He seems to post his own blogs randomly; sometimes it is a week between posts and sometimes a month. But the section I truly enjoyed visiting was the class projects section.
He has a separate blog for each class section for each year. Within each section he uses the blog to communicate with students as follow up from class discussion and activities. He also uses this social media to pull back out past homework as a follow-up or extension opportunity. He also uses student work examples in his posts. He asks students to reflect and respond to his posts. He even has a link on the side to each student's blogs. The students used the blogs to ask questions about material they did not understand, post assignments, reflect on questions, and were commenting on each other's posts. This is a wonderful way to extend the classroom into the home.
I love the way he uses his site to communicate and extend learning outside of the restricted minutes inside a classroom. I also love that he offers great sources through his site as well as pulling students in using clips that would appeal to students. For example, one of his posts has a clip from The Daily Show with John Stewart. What's a better way to pull students in other than pop culture? His site offers links to websites on a variety of topics such as energy conservation, news stories in science topics from sites such as NPR, NBC, and Fox, and provides photos, maps, and graphs. I will definitely model my blog use after Mr. Willard - and so many ideas are already forming in my head.
I want a great tool for students and parents. I will want to create blogs for students to respond to based on class discussion. I want each student to have their own blog to ask questions for other students to respond to as well as posting about what they learned and are curious about. I want to provide links to sites and data for students to use for enrichment. As an example of a topic for the blog - I teach an Earth science unit which includes discussion of man's impact on the environment. Students could research different ways man impacts the environment (positive and negative) and create posts and have discussions about these impacts through the blog. It would keep students talking outside of class and create conversation for class the next day. I could also post links to websites that could help them get started or go further with their ideas. Or I could start a thread about global warming and have students respond to it. There are so many ways this tool could be used. This is also a great tool for parents to keep up to date on what we are discussing as well as having resources themselves to keep conversation going with their student. I could also post homework and test reminders.
Science includes communication which is often an overlooked component in the subject. Blogging offers a great way to introduce students to this facet of being a scientist. They should learn to share ideas and that it is ok to disagree with each other in the proper way.
My biggest hold back at this point is my student audience. I work against two potential barriers. One being that my students are in middle school and may not yet have access to the computer/Internet. The second being that working with low-socioeconomic students means that resources just may not be available. I do not have a permanent class set of technology that would allow us to use this tool more frequently. Even if I did have a class set for daily in class use - that defeats the goal of having engagement with science outside of class. These are obstacles I am still working on - any suggestions?




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