Showing posts with label PLN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PLN. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

PreziU - educational community for Prezi in education



Prezi, the zooming presentation tool that makes presentations engaging and fun, has announced PreziU, an educational community where educators can share best practices for using Prezi in education.

PreziU is a "community site where teachers and students can talk, share and learn how to use Prezi in education". There are articles, tips, Prezi's by other educators, and forums to discuss using Prezi in education.



If you use Prezi, or want to, check out PreziU - http://edu.prezi.com/






Thursday, February 9, 2012

Great poster for creating a PLN with Twitter




A Personal Learning Network (PLN) is a vital part of every educators career. Whether it is their fellow teachers in their building, or educators around the world, a PLN supports, shares, and educates each other.

Through my PLN, I found a great poster that explains how to use Twitter to create a PLN.

Check it out and share with others. http://milestomes.com/?p=221



Related:

Create a Personal Learning Network

Twitter for Education - a great resource

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

#PBLchat - Twitter chat for Project Based Learning



Project Based Learning is a great way to teach content, as well as other needed skills (communication, teamwork, problem solving, technology, etc) - see related for more on these skills.

Edutopia is a great resource for information and resources on Project Based Learning as it is one of their main topics. It's also a great resource for any educator for a variety of topics.

Edutopia has a great article on a new Twitter chat, #PBLchat, that just launched in December. It occurs on Tuesdays at 9pm EST, 6pm Pacific and is growing every week.

I'm a firm believer in Project Based Learning and Twitter as a resource for educators and #PBLchat just brings the two together.

Join us!



Related:

Project Based Learning Resource page

10 Important Skills Students Need for the Future

10 Tech Skills every Student Should Have

STEM Resources page


Monday, January 30, 2012

Discovery Educator Network - great resources and great addition to any PLN





Discovery Education is an excellent resource for educators. They have great fee-based products (Streaming, Assessment, Science and more) and over 30 free resources available for educators. The Discovery Educator Network is also a great resource for educators where they can connect with other educators and share resources and information. I've been a member of the DEN for many years, am a STAR educator and am also on the Leadership Council for Connecticut. The DEN provides a community for educators where they can socialize, share resources, and learn from each other. There are online resources, videos, blogs, links, downloads, contests and prizes, and so much more. The state Leadership Councils are made up of educators who volunteer to create social events, learning events, and write the blog posts. They work hand-in-hand with Discovery Education employees (like Steve Dembo @teach42) to support educators. 


The resources and post are not all about Discovery Education products, although many are. 


I've learned a lot from being a part of the DEN and have met some great people. Here's some details from research done on the DEN. 

Star Discovery Educator / Leadership Council

Discovery Education had Researchers from the Harvard Graduate School of Education investigate the Discovery Educator Network to determine how the DEN has affected educator’s professional development and their use of technology in their work. You can read through the highlights here, as well as find a link to the full study. For those of you that are more visual in nature though, we took a few of the key points and turned them into an infographic.
Click on the image below to view the full infographic. And don’t forget, many browsers will attempt to resize it to fit the screen. If your mouse icon is a magnifying glass, click on the image to see it full size.





The Discovery Educator Network is a great addition to any educator's Personal Learning Network.






Tuesday, January 10, 2012

The Educator's PLN - the personal learning network of educators




Personal Learning Networks are a great way to be a life-long learner and connect and collaborate with other educators. The Educator's PLN is a great resource to add to your PLN.

The Educator's PLN is an interactive site for educators that was created by Tom Whitby. Membership is free. On the main page, you can see summary of recent activity on the site and links to the rest of the site. There is a profile page that you can modify with your information and favorite pages. There are hundreds of educational videos, discussion forums, group pages, a chat page, a page with feed from the #Edchat on Twitter, and events page and more.

This site is a great place to connect and collaborate with educators, share resources, and learn.



Related:

Create a Personal Learning Network

Twitter Resources for Educators

Twitter for Education

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Teachbook - Online Community for Teachers



Teachbook is an online community for teachers. The site is free, but does require you to register an account with them.

The site includes an online planbook to create, organize, and share lesson plans, a lesson plan section, community and forums, videos, news and online course section.

It creates a secure way to communicate with other educators and you can also use it to communicate with your students and parents.

Teachbook could be a good addition to your resource list and make it a part of your Personal Learning Network. 





Monday, December 5, 2011

TappedIn - online workplace of an international community of education professionals



TappedIn is a free, interesting site for educators that describes itself as "the online workplace of an international community of education professionals. K-12 teachers and librarians, professional development staff, teacher education faculty and students, and researchers engage in professional development programs and informal collaborative activities with colleagues." It is a web-based learning environment and professional learning community for educators.

TappedIn is organized in virtual buildings for each topic and area and each building includes public, group and personal "rooms" for educators to use. Users can create their own groups and communicate via chat, private messaging, and discussion boards. Student accounts are also available. 

Educators from around the world participate in TappedIn and collaborate with each other. Educators can plan and conduct learning projects, participate and lead discussions, attend online courses, mentor other educators and get feedback on lesson ideas.

There are hundreds of groups and rooms in different educational topic areas. There are places to upload files, share links, and a whiteboard to write notes. 

It's an excellent resource for educators. 


Monday, October 3, 2011

A-Z Dictionary of Educational Twitter Hashtags

Edudemic

Edudemic, which is a great resource for educators, has posted a dictionary of educational Twitter hashtags. Hashtags are ways of organizing and tagging Twitter posts and there are a lot of them for education.

Twitter is a great tool for educators and is an essential part of any educator's Personal Learning Network.

This article lists and describes the different educational hashtags. If you are an educator and use Twitter (and we all should), this is a great place to go to find the hashtags for your area of interest.







Wednesday, February 23, 2011

A Personal Learning Network for Parents

As educators, we speak of Personal Learning Networks (PLN) for ourselves, and sometimes our students. But what about parents?

Parents need resources to help them stay connected with school and their child's education. School memos and newsletters are not enough. One phone number at the school is not enough. Even having the email and/or phone number of teachers and counselors is not enough.

Here are some things that schools and districts should do to help parents have a PLN of their own:

1. School website - constantly updated, with links, resources, news, information, and contacts for teachers and staff. Information should be easy to find and read. Website should also have built-in translation abilities or instructions for using something like Google Translate. This is very important for limited or non-English speaking parents.
School blogs and Twitter accounts can also be used to share information with parents.

2. Email addresses - for child's teachers, administrator, and counselor. And, email list for other resources, like the school nurse, social worker, ELL coordinator, etc.

3. Phone list - for everyone listed in email address above.

4. Monthly parent workshops where parents can come to the school and meet the faculty and staff and make connections. They would also learn about the different resources at the school and district and how these resources can help them and their child. These workshops could also focus on tips and resources for creating a rich learning environment in the home for their child. There could also be seminars on computers, English language, parenting, and more.

5. Parent-Teacher Association contacts and meeting times need to be well published also.

6. Online Student information system - parents should be able to access real time grades and attendance information about their child. Most SIS offer this now.

7. Schoolwork and Homework help - help parents understand how to help their children with homework, even if they don't understand the subject matter. Give them ideas on providing time and space for the student to work. Helping students get good nutrition and enough sleep. Giving parents a list of resources to pass onto the student (like websites, tutoring, and the library).

These are great resources to help parents find information and help for them and/or their child. The personal connections are most important though. As parents meet staff in person they will feel more comfortable utilizing them and coming to them with issues and concerns.

Many parents feel disconnected from schools, especially in the higher grades when there are multiple teachers and administrators to deal with. Schools must work to give parents easy access to information and resources, and make parents feel comfortable in contacting the school for help.

What are your ideas for PLN's for Parents?


UPDATE: I forgot one great source for parents in a PLN - other parents. They can make connections, talk, help each other, share babysitting, carpools, etc.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Recent Resources I've Posted on Twitter




I post a lot of things to Twitter that I don't necessarily post as an article on my blog.  Twitter is a great tool for learning and collaborating with other educators. It is an essential part of any Personal Learning Network (PLN).

Here is a sampling of some of the sites and resources I've posted or retweeted from others.


Student Owned Devices Save Districts money - http://goo.gl/eS1y0 - #edtech, #edchat, #education via @convergemag


 View New Panoramic Photos in Google Earth - http://goo.gl/L2O0O - via @rmbyrne - #edtech, #google, #edchat, #teachtips


Top 20 Websites No Teacher Should Start the 10-11 Year Without - http://goo.gl/5CDW - great list of some great sites for educators #edchat 


 How to import PowerPoint into MovieMaker - http://goo.gl/i3z1 - #DENSI, #DEN, #edtech, #edchat, #teachtips


RT @mcleod: RT @chrislehmann Twitter is the virtual faculty room... resources, jokes, life, conversation. Good stuff.- great description!


zecool: This week: free online sessions at the Global Education Conference http://t.co/AeCcZZHBackchannel tag: #globaled10


#TeachMeet NJ Unconference is March 5th at Rutgers U. Teach. Learn. Grow. It's FREE! Register to come! http://bit.ly/cb7GnQ#education


Top Rated @Palm#webOS tips - http://goo.gl/lW11f - great resource for all #webOS users. Via @precentral


RT @davidwees: New blog post: Classrooms are like buses. http://wees.it/di #edchat - interesting, and accurate, analogy! 


Free Alternatives to the Departing GOOG-411 - http://goo.gl/scmIO - #edtech, #technology


NOVA - Explore the Galapagos http://goo.gl/fb/2WFOt#edtech, #edchat 


SugarSync Ups Its Free Accounts to 5 GB! Includes existing users! Check out more about Sugarsync here: http://goo.gl/iV39 #edtech, #techtips


DEN: Visited DEN Global blog recently? This would be a good time! Now ALL the Leadership Councils are in the flow http://denblogs.com 


RT @rmbyrne: Teachers: Please stop prohibiting the use of Wikipedia | ZDNet - http://zd.net/dB73Z0 - I find Wikipedia to be a great source 


 djainslie: top educational tools for learning- my 2 cents http://bit.ly/8ZA6oi#edchat #teaching


ShellTerrell: A fantastic read! Transformative or just flashy educational tools? http://bit.ly/appSgQ#edtech #edchat by @datruss


 Larryferlazzo: The Best Places To Learn Web 2.0 Basicshttp://bit.ly/bdA6oN 

Friday, October 29, 2010

Creating a Personal Learning Network with Web 2.0 Tools


Creating a Personal Learning Network with Web 2.0 Tools is a site that helps teachers set up and create a PLN. It has information and resources from multiple teachers and includes a variety of resources for teachers to use to connect with other educators. The site was created as part of a presentation for FETC 2009.

I'm a huge proponent of PLNs and this is definitely a great site to use to create or expand your own PLN.

Related Articles:
http://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/p/create-personal-learning-network.html

Friday, October 1, 2010

Great Articles - Professional Development 2.0






Jason Bedell is a member of my PLN. He and I have similar views on education and he has recently written 21 articles on his blog entitled "Professional Development 2.0". These articles are informative, easy to read, timely, and very relevant to the needs of all educators. I highly suggest reading them. 


Professional Development does not have to be, and shouldn't be, a bunch of teachers sitting in a room being lectured by some "expert" who probably hasn't been in a classroom in 20 years. It should be educators sharing ideas, tips, resources, and how they have overcome obstacles. A PLN is part of your professional development network. Use it! 


Here is a list of the topics he has covered:



Professional Development 2.0 series.

Check out his blog and read these articles. They are definitely worth your time!


Thursday, September 23, 2010

Follow Me on Twitter




This year my schedule is a little busier than usual. I'm teaching an extra class so I'm now teaching 5 Physics classes and 1 AP Physics class. I'm also teaching an EMS Instructor program (8 x 8hr Saturdays) and I just started my second Master's Degree (Educational Leadership). My first Master's is in Educational Technology Integration.

The result is that I'm posting to the blog less often. But, I do Tweet out a lot of links, resources, and tips. So, follow my blog, and follow me on Twitter. @daveandcori.

I also post a list of what I've tweeted here on the blog as a sort of summary.

If you can't get Twitter at school because it's blocked (like me). Here's a work around. Use TwitterGadget.

Thanks for following me and being part of my PLN.



TwitterGadget - get around Twitter being blocked.



Twitter Gadget is a great app for accessing Twitter, even if Twitter is blocked (like it is at my district).

Twitter Gadget is an app that you can use in iGoogle, GMail or as a stand-alone app. It is very easy to use and works well. I actually like using it in iGoogle over the Twitter home page.

It's free and the site has easy instructions and references on how to use it.

TwitterGadget in iGoogle:


TwitterGadget Stand-alone in browser:


It's a great resource and I use it even when Twitter isn't blocked.

(If you use a Palm Pre+/Pixi+ I recommend Twee as a great Twitter app for webOS)

Any other great Twitter clients that get around Twitter being blocked?

UPDATE 12-10-2010


TweetDeck and Tweetdeck's web app also work if Twitter is blocked and are both very powerful!



Thursday, June 10, 2010

Reflecting on the Past School Year (And preparing for next year)



I'm done with my school year. I have all seniors and they finished their finals yesterday. Graduation is on the 17th and the 18th is the last day of school. As I sit here having finished all my grades, I start to reflect on the past year. What worked? What went right? What went wrong? How did I handle classroom management issues? How well did my students learn? Lots of questions to answer and get ready for next year. I do this throughout the year too, but this is the point where I can really plan and make changes for the following year.

One thing I do to as an evaluation of the year is to have my students fill out a survey about the class and their experience. It asks them to rate things such as was the classroom and equipment (labs and projects) adequate, was enough time given for demonstrations and review, how well did the teacher answer student questions, and their thoughts on assignments and work given. It also asks about me: did I set a climate that was conducive to learning, did I effectively communicate with students, did I address their needs and issues, and were the teaching methods effective. I also have space for them to write comments about what they liked about the class and what they think should be improved. They can put their name on it or it can be anonymous.

I do take the surveys with a grain of salt. Some students write all "4" (highest score) and some complain that everything was too hard. But I do get a lot of great feedback and ideas. Some times I am surprised by the level of sophistication that I my students have and how insightful they are about their classes. (I've also used this model with pre-service teachers).

After I've read through all of the surveys and taken notes, I sit and think about the whole year. I try to be critical of things so that I can really evaluate how things went. I am going to implement some of the things I've come up with and some of the things my students noted, but I am also going to keep my lessons flexible so that I can modify them once I've met my students next year and see what they are like and what they need. I believe in constantly assessing how I am doing as an educator and how well my students are learning and changing and modifying things as needed throughout the year. The end of the year and summer are great times to come up with lots of different ideas so that I have a collection of ideas to use next year.

Ongoing Assessment is a term we use in EMS for constantly monitoring our patient and changing our treatment as needed based on the patient. This is also something we do in education. We change things to meet the needs of our students.

Next year I'm going to utilize the classroom blogs and Google Forms to get more feedback from the students throughout the year. I'm also looking at different ways to assess their learning more often, and have a toolbox of ideas and lessons to use when I have to change things up or modify things.

As I write this, I keep having thoughts about issues I've had and how to change them next year. I'm also thinking about the type of teacher I am and what I can do to improve my attitude and persona to make me better. I think one of the things I'm going to do this summer is watch a few movies about teachers (Lean on Me, Freedom Writers, Stand and Deliver) for motivation, and keep active with my PLN (Personal Learning Network) to share ideas, thoughts, and resources. I want to come back to school next year enthusiastic, motivated, and ready to have some fun while educating. I want to make sure I am ready to be the best educator I can be. The only way to do that is to be prepared and constantly evaluate the teaching and learning in my classroom and modifying it as needed.

How do you evaluate teaching and learning in your classroom? What do you do at the end of the year and summer to prep for the next year?


Sunday, January 24, 2010

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

My Personal Learning Network


Graphic from http://blog.misterhamada.com/category/k12-learning-2-0/.

In an earlier post, I talked about Personal Learning Networks. Here is a list of resources and people in my PLN.

My wife, Cori, is also in my PLN. She is currently finishing her degree in Biology/Education and will be a high school biology teacher. We constantly talk about education and she has given me some great ideas and tips. It's great having a spouse in the same career! (We also met because of our part time careers - EMS!).

Follow on Twitter: (I follow over 70 Tweeters right now, and I will be expanding - these are my main influences)
Edutopia
TechLearning
Discovery Education (DEN)
rmbyrne
web20classroom
rstoup
TeachPaperless
Darcy1968
DoremiGirl
smeech
robchulcas


Communities:

Some of the Blogs I follow:
Tech&Learning TL Advisor Blogs (I also write for it).


Once you start following some blogs and people on Twitter, you will start to find more blogs and people to add to your own Personal Learning Network. I find my PLN to be invaluable to me as an educator and I look forward to seeing what they have to offer each day.





Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Creating a Personal Learning Network (PLN)




What is a PLN? A PLN is a way for you to make connections and share ideas and resources. You have one with colleagues that you work with. You can also have one online where you can reach and connect with educators from around the state, country, and world. Talk about a great resource!

Quotes about PLN's:
@kylepace:Because of this PLN,not only do I grow professionally, but I have made professional connections and friendships around the world
@wmchamberlain: #edchat a PLN lets us access the best of the best, not just someone close by. "Dont I deserve the best?" Gaston
@djainslie: My PLN opened the world to me 'the world is open'
@JasonFlom: PLN's flatten the world, removing barriers to collaboration, corroboration, and general camaraderie.
@wmchamberlain: #edchat a pln gives me hundreds of intelligent people to solve my problem. Whats not to love?
@cybraryman1: A PLN is a collection of interconnected minds that share ideas and information.

Functions of a PLN: Connect - Collaborate - Contribute

Benefits of a PLN: Teachers become: Aware, Connected, Empowered, Confident, LEARNERS!
(oh, and everything listed here is FREE!)

How to get started with a PLN:
  • Sign up for an account with one of the resources. Start looking around and find people and groups with the same interests as you.
  • Ning-Classroom 2.0, Discovery Educator Network, PBS Teacher Connect and Google Educators Forum are great places to start.
  • With Twitter - follow someone you know, like me (@daveandcori) and see who they follow.
Some other educators to follow on Twitter: @rmbyrne, @web20classroom.
  • Search for blogs and web sites that cover topics you are interested in and subscribe to them via email or RSS feed. See who they follow and blogs they subscribe to also.

Resources for PLN:
Classroom 2.0 - http://www.classroom20.com/ - Great site for 21st Century Learning
  • iGoogle - http://www.google.com/ig - custom, personalized start page
    • Google Reader - - read RSS feeds - embed in iGoogle
    • Twitter - via Twitter Gadget (works in school) - embed in iGoogle