USING WEB 2.O TOOLS IN THE K-12 CLASSROOM By Barb Daniels.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
On-line media tools for strategic communications purposes When using media tools for communication we try to use the latest technologies such us blogging,
Advertisements

DR. STRANGEBLOG Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love classroom technology.
digital natives live in a multimedia world only know media in all color prioritize visual learning demand creativity learn best through trial and error.
NETWORK SOURCES for ART TEACHERS. Art Education 2.0 Using Technology in Art Classrooms Art Education.
Blogging in the K-12 Classroom Presented by Brynn Beavers CIED 7160.
 Web 2.0 Learning  Digital Citizenship
DIGITAL STORYTELLING video Music Text Pictures Recorded Audio Graphics.
Impact Learning with Web 2.0 Tools We teach digital natives…..
Joy Millam Joy Millam Teacher Librarian.
Moodle, Blogs, Wikis and More Exploring Web 2.0 Tools: The 2nd Generation of the World Wide Web.
Links Compiled by Monica Graham Theater is a great tool for promoting literacy while engaging students in the arts. I hope you will find these sites to.
21 st Century Technology in the College Classroom Dr. Tracey Pritchard Co-Presenters Dr. Rita Schellenberg Mr. Justin Silvey.
Technology Literacy Education Ways to use Technology in the Classroom
What is Web 2.0?. Web pages frequently change, disappear, and new ones appear. Schools will frequently block interactive websites by default. A simple.
Blogs in Education 101. Contraction of web log, it is: a personal log of thoughts published on a Web page online writing published periodically. Readers.
ISTC 702 Janet Corbin Amy McGinn Susan Miller Lizanne Wallace
Website Resources Putting students first to make learning last a lifetime Celebrating academics, diversity, and innovation.
(Hawaiian for fast) "Wiki" is a backronym for "What I Know Is" A Cool Tool to enhance Student Learning.
Multimedia Workshop EDUC 8847 Orit Hirsh Easy steps to generate a web or a blog for learning.
Digital Storytelling for the English Classroom Presented by Amy Cannady Whitewater Middle School.
Teaching School Wide Positive Behavior Expectations Using QR Codes Name: Barbara Grace Age of Students: Content Area of Teaching Lesson: Behavior.
Yahoo! For Teachers By Teachers, For Teachers. In July 2006 Yahoo! invited a group of educators to partner with them to build technology that addressed.
Technology: Classroom Applications and Teacher Networking Blogs Glogster.edu Storybird.com Dipity.com Qwiki.com Tagxedo.co m voicethread.
Technology: Classroom Applications and Teacher Networking Blogs Glogster.edu Storybird.com Dipity.com Qwiki.com Tagxedo.com.
Digital Storytelling 4/9/2009. Schedule- 4:00-4:10 Welcome & Overview for tonight. Sign-in Moodle Log-in 4:10-5:00- Digital Storytelling Intro What is.
Podcasting A Web 2.0 Learning Tool By, Doug Walker District Technology Coordinator Hillsdale Public Schools.
Digital Learning Spaces Leanne Shultz March 2006.
Did You Know?. Welcome to Flip Cam Academy! A Vision of K-12 Students Today.
“Whether at school or in the workplace, young people hunger for a more creative and interactive relationship with the world.... They have to be interactive.
Primary Grade Math and Technology Integration Jennifer Sinisi Website:
Web 2.0 What is Web 2.0? It is just the term for web-based applications and programs that focus on information sharing and user created content and collaboration,
Mastering the High-Tech Classroom. Time Most teachers’ chief complainant is that they do not have enough time. Technology integration in the classroom.
Jane Hudson, Media Coordinator Deborah Icard, Tech Teacher Cloverleaf Elementary.
Glogster EETT Training Mathew Swerdloff November 30, 2010.
Web 2.0 and Internet Safety for Educators 3/2/20111Region 1.
Blogs Wikis ePals Tweets Communicating and Creating with ICT.
+ Digital Storytelling and Online Bookmaking Spring PDC Day 2011 Leslie C. Savage, LMS Palmer Elementary.
Moodle: Engaging Students Online Nathalie Rudner, Thornhill Secondary School Anita Drossis, Vaughan Secondary School York Region District School Board.
* Research suggests that technology used in classrooms can be especially advantageous to at-risk, EL, and special ed students. (Means, Blando, Olson,
 Prepare students to become 21 st century learners  Meet Alaska ELA and technology standards  Prepare students for the future  Spread the use of technology.
WEB 2.0 FOR TEACHING AND STUDENT PROJECTS Presenters: ELI CLARKE, NONCREDIT ESL INSTRUCTOR, KRISTI REYES, NONCREDIT ESL INSTRUCTOR,
Literacy in the 21 st Century It’s not just about reading and writing anymore. Cool Tools Presentation DASD August 22, 2008.
LEARNING TOOLS & LITERACY JOANNE KURI Technology & Literacy Summer II Professor: Dr. Smirnova.
Developing the Global Student: Practical Ways to Infuse 21st Century Literacy Skills in Your Classroom Presented by Kim Cofino Teach IT! Singapore November.
World English Dictionary Web 2.0 —n the Internet viewed as a medium in which interactive experience, in the form of blogs, wikis, forums, etc, plays.
Web Resources for your Social Studies Classroom By Adam Schnug.
Copyright © 2012 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. * Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others. Bring Your Own Device A Presentation.
MEDIA LITERACY MEDIA LITERACY. “In communications, media (singular medium) are the storage and transmission channels or tools used to store and deliver.
What is Web 2.0? We, the users, are Web 2.0…we create sites that allow people to interact, exchange, and collaborate with each other via the World Wide.
Implementing Web 2.0 Tools in the Middle Grades Science Classroom: Glogster and PBWorks Going Digital in the K-12 Classroom An Advancing Literacy Workshop.
Digital Storytelling Module 6 Developed by Katie Straka Summer 2014.
Web 2.0 for K-3 Students VAETC09014 Tuesday, 9:00 -9:55 Charlotte Oglesby.
What the Principal Needs to Know About Web 2.0 by Rita Lewis Smith October 19, 2010.
Using Web 2.0 Tools to Promote Learning in the Classroom A Professional Development Workshop on… Kelly Mulligan LIS 17:610:575 Assignment 3.
For the Technology Classroom
Proprietary & Confidential Get Your Glog On!. Time to Get Our ‘Og On! GlogsBlogsVlogs.
Michelle Halvorsen Texas School for the Deaf, Austin NABT Conference Friday November 5, 2010.
Libraries are Changing Keeping Up, Being Successful.
By: Brea Sabatka. Website explaining what web 2.0 is. Web is the second stage of development of the World Wide Web, characterized esp. by the change.
Overview In this tutorial you will: learn what an e-portfolio is learn about the different things e-portfolios may be used for identify some options for.
Computers as Learning Tools Amanda Cantafio. ADVANTAGES OF USING COMPUTERS IN THE CLASSROOM ▪ Students gain word processing skills when learning to type:
Tech Tools Designed to Change Your Classroom. Tanner Reed.
Bloom's Taxonomy and Web 2.o Tools Portfolio Activity.
TIE 300 Session #5 (July 27).
Learning and Working in the 21st Century Classroom
Web 2.0 Tools Professional Development
denblogs.com/jendorman
Elementary students start smart with Britannica Online School Edition!
The Next Generation of the World Wide Web – In your classroom!
Presentation transcript:

USING WEB 2.O TOOLS IN THE K-12 CLASSROOM By Barb Daniels

WHAT IS WEB 2.0? According to Dictionary.com, Web 2.0 is “a second generation in the development of the World Wide Web, conceived as a combination of concepts, trends, and technologies that focus on user collaboration, sharing of user-generated content and social networking”. The Collins English Dictionary states that Web 2.0 is “the internet viewed as a medium in which interactive experience, in the form of blogs, wikis, forums, etc, plays a more important role than simply accessing information.” Basically, Web 2.0 is tech tools that engage users, and involve them in the process of gaining and sharing information, often through creative means.

WHY USE WEB 2.0 TOOLS? Today’s students are constantly plugged in, communicating with others wirelessly, gathering music, photos, and information at the touch of a fingertip. This is how they prefer to spend their time! Technology is a proven motivator; it is naturally engaging and entertaining. Web 2.0 tools give students a natural platform for sharing information. They naturally cause students to utilize higher order thinking skills of synthesizing, analyzing, and creating. Most students prefer to learn through interaction with others, and this happens through collaboration and networking on the web. Using Web 2.0 tools fosters life-long learning and literacy.

“ ” IT IS NOT THE AVAILABILITY OF TECHNOLOGY THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE, BUT THE WAY TEACHERS EMBED CRITICAL THINKING INTO ITS USE THAT WILL IMPACT STUDENT LEARNING. Carrice Cummins, 2013 Sample museum box

THINGS TO REMEMBER…, *Start small - Master 1 tool before trying to use another. *Be prepared – Be sure the tool is accessible at school, and that it works well on school computers. *Have an alternate plan – This may include using a different website, or using paper and pencil. *Keep the focus on the content-not the technology! *Let students take the lead – you don’t have to master every tool if students can teach the class to use them.

THINGS THAT EFFECTIVE FACILITATORS OF TECHNOLOGY KNOW Technology is here to stay! It is not just another passing phase in education. You don’t have to be an expert in technology to use Web 2.0 tools. Consider yourself a co-learner with the students. Use technology to expand your students’ world and put them in touch with others. Technology is not responsible for the students’ learning, the teachers are! Technology is not the destination, but one of several vehicles that can be used to get them where they need to go. Teachers no longer need to be the “sage on the stage”, but a “guide on the side” as students construct their own meanings, and become effective communicators.

WHAT KINDS OF TOOLS ARE OUT THERE? An incredible site that you must check out is Web 2.0:Cool Tools for School

SOME OF THE TYPES OF WEB 2.0 TOOLS FOUND ON THE INTERNET Presentation, Collaboration Research, Graphing, Widgets Audio, Video, Images Writing, Drawing, Music Organizing, Mapping, Quizzes & Polls Slideshows, Creativity Web Pages, File Storage, Converting Cool Tools has multiple examples and links for every type of tool!

OVERWHELMED??? Given the vast amount of tools that are readily available on the internet, that are totally free, its not surprising! There are many books written on using Web 2.0 tools in the classroom, not to mention the articles, wikis and blogs that are available. One good resource is The Super Book of Web Tools for Educators which can be downloaded for free from “A Media Specialists’ Guide to the Internet” at you-about.html you-about.html

SOME GOOD PLACES TO START… While there are thousands of tools out there, some are extremely popular because of their appeal and user friendliness. Another good bet is to find a friend who uses technology successfully, and use them as a resource. Presentation tools are fun for students to play with, and a valuable way for them to organize and synthesize information to share with others. Storytelling and blogging tools are another easy and fun way for students to practice writing skills. Some of the most popular tools are as follows…

GLOGSTER Online posters that can be embedded with images, music, and videos.

BLABBERIZE Students can draw a picture or use a photo, choose a spot to be the “mouth”, then record their text.

PREZI An interactive presentation tool that students can collaborate on, and showcase their creativity as they share information.

SHELFARI A great intro to social networking by sharing, reviewing, and commenting on others’ book selections.

WEEBLY Super simple and attractive website builder. Allows students to synthesize, organize, and share information.

IN CONCLUSION… Whether you are a student, teacher, media specialist, administrator, parent or grandparent, you simply have to begin checking out the amazing Web 2.0 tools for use with students, children, or just for yourself! Trying just one of the suggested tools will get you so excited about technology, you will have to try more tools. And most importantly… Technology is here to stay, and it is an amazing tool that we should not try to live without! Image created with Tagxedo

References Anderson, S., Bellow, A., Byrne, R., Couros, G., Ferlazzo, L., Kolbert, L… Tolisano, S. R. (2010). The super book of web tools for educators. Retrieved from Cool Tools for School. (2014) Retrieved from Cummins, C. (2013). Using technology to make a difference. Reading Today, 30(5), 2-4. David Ligon. (2009, August 9). 21 st Century Teaching & Learning [Web log post]. Retrieved from Essential Collaboration, Web 2.0 and Social Leaning Platforms for 21 st Century Education. (2013). District Administration, 49(1), Intel Free Press (Photographer). Kids with education tablet computers. (2010). [Digital Image].Retrieved from Linik, J. (2012). Literacy 2.0: Teaching students the skills needed to succeed in our information economy. Education Digest:Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 78(3), Ramig, R. (2010). Online tools for research—elementary and middle school style. Multimedia & Schools, 17(5), Schaffhauser, D. (2012). The best free Web 2.0 tools. THE Journal, 39(1), 47. Steer, D. (2012). Improve formal learning with social media. T+D, 66(12), Story, T. (2012). Can Web 2.0 strengthen reading skills?. Library Media Connection, 31(3), Wanago, N. (2013). Effective Web 2.0 Tools for your classroom. Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers, 88(1),

Web 2.0. (n.d.). Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 1: 2.0http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Web 2.0 Web 2.0. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged. Retrieved July 18, 2014, from Dictionary.com website: 2.0http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Web 2.0 Young, C. & Rasinski, T. (2013). Student-Produced movies as a medium for literacy development. Reading Teacher, 66(8),