Sunday, September 7, 2014

5 Technologies You Should Consider Using in the Classroom by Don Waisanen






reprinted from Huffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/don-waisanen/5-technologies-you-should_b_5669035.html
The news this week has been replete with stories about whether or not iPads or similar devices can contribute much to students' learning. Whatever the answers, what is clear is that online and mobile media technologies aren't going away any time soon. In an environment where students are as likely to look at their phones as take notes, new styles of learning and interaction will continue to present a challenge for educators. As a communication scholar and teacher, I've attended a number of workshops and conferences related to this topic over the past year. Without replacing existing teaching methods, it's clear to me that teaching with new technologies at least offers a host of new strategies for presentation, discussion, or assignments worth considering. I've compiled a list below of some platforms others may find useful in their own teaching.
Since there's so many new tools out there, I've tried to think about each of these from the viewpoint of a bored, skeptical student who might rightly question such technologies as "gimmicky." With that lens filtering my suggestions, here's some programs potentially applicable to many courses, with some rationales next to each:
1) Poll Everywhere. I love this one, although we can definitely put it in the "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" category. Since students bring their cell phones to class and are constantly tempted to start texting friends and others, why not let that impulse serve your educational goals instead? Poll Everywhere replaces "clickers" in the classroom. Instructors can pose a series of prepared questions or take a quick, impromptu poll on a topic. Students then text their answers to the numbers/options presented on the classroom screen, and voila, you've got an involving way of seeing students' thoughts. This method is also great for getting everyone in the class to participate, drawing out those who wouldn't normally respond to instructor prompts.* (www.polleverywhere.com)
2) Powtoons. Somewhere between a Prezi presentation and a video commercial,Powtoons allows students to create professional-looking cartoon videos on any subject matter. I run a campaigns course where students have to create 1-2 minute commercials as part of their final projects. Students in my course have found this program easy to use and a way to bring more creativity to their assignments. If you are working in a completely online course or moving a current class into more of a hybrid online/offline format, you should also consider using this program to create lectures that can be posted online. (www.powtoons.com)
3) Social Media "Sentiment" Analysis. Let's face it, many students already spend countless hours broadcasting their opinions on social media. Whether you're teaching a statistics class covering the concepts of validity and generalizability, or an English class unpacking an author's textual choices, the different programs that claim to measure public "sentiment" on a topic can make unfamiliar subjects more relatable. (For a variety of tools, see http://bit.ly/JZaJGY)
4) The Social Media "Wall." For this one, I recommend first deciding how "public" or "private" your course will be. As much as this strategy presents an opportunity to rework how a course is taught, there's also a level of risk entailed if you choose the more "public" route. Create a class "group" formally or informally through a site like NingGoogle Hangout, or Facebook--or through various programs' instant messenger functions. The instructor can keep this wall up on the screen during class, inviting students to post comments or questions while the session runs. For an even more "public" version of this strategy, you can create a Twitter wall or hashtag to which students can post. This makes the classroom space less private, but it also offers an opportunity to actually produce a larger conversational commons. From my perspective, I consider classrooms private spaces where students should have the ability to experiment, so I would err on the side of limiting the site to course members only. But as new programs and forms of social media develop, this seems like a great strategy for making lectures, in particular, more participatory than traditional formats have permitted.
5) Ethelo Decisions. Moving beyond the simplicity of Poll Everywhere to a tool that promises to bring online research and group decision making fully into the 21st century, Ethelo Decisions is an online collaboration platform that can take students through parts of a research, analysis, and decision making process on any particular issue. As the site outlines, there are survey and voting tools, social media and other sharing features, reports, and data management options all in one place. For the teaching context, what has most stood out to me is the tool's potential to engage students in how collective knowledge might be produced and evaluated. (http://ethelodecisions.com/)
New technologies aren't everything, but they can broaden an educator's repertoire and work with methods of understanding that are already a part of students' everyday lives. In that spirit, if you've found some novel uses for these or any other new technology methods, join me in advancing this conversation on Twitter@DonWaisanen.
*I'd like to acknowledge Shannon VanHorn and Jonna Ziniel's National Communication Association workshop, "There's an App for That," for being especially helpful in drawing my attention to the Poll EverywherePowtoons, and social media wall examples.
Don Waisanen is an assistant professor of communication in the School of Public Affairs, Baruch College/CUNY.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

No More Snow Days?

Through the use of technology, teachers and students can stay connected and recover instructional time even though falling snow has traffic stalled and schools closed.

Hun School teacher holds class via tablet as she sits in Pa. turnpike gridlock
By Alyssa Mease/The Times of Trenton 
on February 15, 2014 at 6:30 AM, updated February 15, 2014 at 6:33 AM
PRINCETON — After missing multiple school days because of snow this winter, Hun School history teacher Lynn McNulty wasn’t going to let a series of chain-reaction car crashes and a miles-long traffic jam on the Pennsylvania Turnpike yesterday keep her from school another day.
“I was probably about two miles back from the big, serious pileup, but there were accidents all around,” McNulty said yesterday. “And I was like, ‘Oh this is bad.’”
After sitting in the stand-still for about an hour at the Willow Grove exit on the turnpike and live-streaming a news program on her cell phone, McNulty realized her chances of getting to school in time to teach her advanced placement European history class were not good. So she posted a message to her class through the school’s internal communications system, telling them to contact her via video chat when they got in.
Bridging a distance of miles through technology, McNulty yesterday used the school’s electronic resources and her tablet computer to teach her class from her car that was stopped on the turnpike, which was shut down for hours because of an initial 25-vehicle pileup around 8:30 a.m. in the eastbound lanes between Willow Grove and Bensalem and Willow Grove, according to 6ABC.com.
“Literally no one was moving, and I sat through a total of four-and-a-half hours,” McNulty said.
All freshman and sophomore students in the school are given tablets, so the classroom was equipped with the technology to support a virtual discussion, McNulty said. The school’s technology coordinator and McNulty’s department chair sat in on the class to make sure everything ran smoothly, she said.
“It wasn’t really out of the realm of possibility,” McNulty said. “I could see all the kids, and could see all the kids discussing with one another.”
The topic of yesterday’s discussion was Napolean III and the Crimean War, McNulty said.
“They were into it, and I think they knew I was serious about being there,” she said. “I flipped the phone around to show them I was really stuck on the turnpike.”
McNulty said she usually gets on the eastbound turnpike at Fort Washington and had just passed the Willow Grove exit when she encountered the stopped traffic. Although her car was not damaged and she was not injured, she said the road conditions were poor yesterday morning and a few cars around her were involved in minor accidents because they couldn’t come to a stop in time.