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Technology in the Classroom – Publish to
the World!
CASAS Summer Institute
June 23, 2009
Marian Thacher & Branka Marceta, OTAN
2
Agenda• Technology in Adult Ed Legislation• Technology in the Future• Mobile Instruction• eWhiteboard• Student Response Systems• Document Camera• Moodle• Audio• Video• Blogs• Wikis
3
Your Role
• Teachers, Coordinators, Administrators?• Not from California?• Never heard of OTAN?• Program area – ESL, ABE/ASE, Corrections,
Other?• How many years in adult education?• Came to this session last year?• What are you hoping to get from this workshop?
4
What is OTAN?• Outreach and Technical Assistance
Network• One of 4 adult education leadership
projects in California• Providing electronic collaboration,
access to information, and technical assistance to literacy and adult education providers in California
• www.otan.us
5
Resources on OTAN
• Technology Planning
• Resources for Teachers
• Lesson Plan Builder
• Students Succeed Project
• PD Calendar
• TIMAC
• Online Document Collection
• Program directory, member directory
• Laws and Legislation
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New Legislation, Obama, and You!
• We will have new defining legislation
• There will be more emphasis on technology– For the classroom– For delivery of instruction– For program administration and
marketing
• Why?
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Workforce Investment Act - Reauthorization
• WIA – waiting for reauthorization
• New Bill – Adult Education and Economic Growth Act
• Currently being worked on in the Senate
• Will determine shape and activities of adult education
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Adult Education and Economic Growth Act• Requires the state adult education
plan to include “a description of how the State will use technology to expand access to and improve the quality of adult education, literacy, and workplace skills services;”
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Nat’l Institute for Adult Ed, Literacy, and
Workplace Skills
• Describes one purpose of the Institute as “providing national leadership on the use of technology for adult education;”
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National Leadership Activities
• One goal is to provide “assistance in distance learning and promoting and improving the use of technology in the classroom.”
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Title III – 21st Century Technology and Skills
for Adult Learners
• To expand access through technology
• Provide PD re using technology• Develop a modern delivery system• Help adult learners get tech literate
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Technology Literacy
• “The knowledge and skills in using contemporary information, communication and learning technologies in a manner necessary for successful lifelong learning and citizenship in the knowledge-based, digital, and global 21st Century…”
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Proposed Funding
• $250 million
• $7.5 million for National Tech Center
• $50 million for state level activities
• $187 million for local agency activities – distributed through grants
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Why is Technology Important?
“Technology should be used in all its forms to make learning a continuous process of inquiry and improvement that keeps pace with the speed of change in business and society.”
p.24
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17
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Where are we going??
• Web 2.0 is a publishing revolution
• A tidal wave of information
• Everything is becoming participative
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Where are we going??
• We are pro-sumers
• The age of the collaborator
• Social learning moves to center stage
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More Thoughts from Steve
• From consuming to producing• From authority to transparency• From the expert to the facilitator• From the lecture to the hallway• From "access to information" to "access to
people“• From "learning about" to "learning to be“• From passive to passionate learning• From presentation to participation• From publication to conversation• From formal schooling to lifelong learning
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Horizon Report• 1 Yr or Less
– Collaborative Environment– Online Communication Tools
• 2 to 3 Years– Mobile Devices– Cloud Computing
• 4 to 5 Years– Smart Objects– The Personal Web
http://www.nmc.org/pdf/2009-Horizon-Report-K12.pdf
Pick One!
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Horizon Report• Significant challenges
– Need instruction on info lit,
visual lit, tech lit– Students are different, but curriculum is
not– Formal assessment strategies don’t
match needed learning– Available data outstrips our ability to
manage it– Delivery of content to mobile devices
Mobile Devices - mLearning
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Cell Phones for Adult Learning?
• Basic features of the mobile phone– Texting– Photos– Video– Audio– Calculator– Calendar– Browser– GPS
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Texting• Question of the Day
– Are you practicing English?– Did you complete the math homework?– Please bring your math homework to class
tomorrow– What does Information Literacy mean?– How many centimeters are there in one meter?– Did you watch 60 Minutes last night? Text me one
thing you learned.– ???
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Text Me!
• What does Information Literacy mean?
• 619-787-7265
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Photos• Ask students to take a photo with their
phone (my best friend, my pet, a flower, my street, a resource in my neighborhood), and write a description
• Send the photo to an album on Photobucket, or to a Flickr or Picasa account
• Ask students to visit the album and write comments on each other’s photos
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Flickr
• Create a Flickr account
• Go to http://www.flickr.com/tools/mobile/
to get your unique email address
• Take a picture
• Send it to your unique email
• View photo online!
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Using Photobucket.com
• Requirements– Cell phone with camera– Send email from cell phone
• Take a picture and send it to [email protected]
• Go to photobucket.com online• Log in – sgaer and 123456• Edit and save your photo
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Posting Audio Files
• GabCast
• Drop.io
• More later
Interactive White Boards
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What is it?• A whiteboard that acts like your monitor• You can click and double-click on the
whiteboard• You can write notes on PowerPoint
slides or other documents and save them• You can take notes like on a flip chart• Move pages around• Convert handwriting to text• Move words around
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How many using them in CA?
Number of agencies reporting the use of electronic whiteboards, out of
approx. 185
What about you?
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eWhiteboard in Corrections
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eWhiteboard in Corrections
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eWhiteboard in Corrections
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eBoard in the ABE Classroom
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Internet for Whole Group
• Project Internet sites such as pictures or pronunciation
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Software for Whole Group
• Project instructional software and let students work from board
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Dragging Words or Objects
Students can manipulate text and objects with one finger
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How Much?
• Promethean - $2500 - $4500
• Smart - $1,000 - $10,000
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Some Web Sites• More videos of ESL class
– www.otan.us/– Ed Tech & Media > Video Gallery
• Videos of what you can do with an interactive whiteboard– http://www.smarttech.com/products/sm
artboard/media.asp– http://www.prometheanworld.com/serve
r.php?show=nav.16900
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Talk to your partners
• Name 3 things you can do with an electronic whiteboard that you can’t do with a regular one.
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Document Camera
• Contains a camera• Show a workbook
page, medicine label, or piece of fruit
• No more transparencies
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What can you do with it?
• With a worksheet• Showing an object• Zooming in
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What can you do with it?
• Project any page or picture
• Students describe or tell a story
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What can you do with it?
• Only have to make materials once
• Strip stories• Matching activity
50
Document Camera
• What’s the difference between a document camera and an overhead projector?
• Why use a document camera?
• What lesson would you like to have a document camera for?
Student Response Systems
52
What are they?
• A tool for instant formative assessment
• A way to get feedback on the class
• Can save and export data
• A variety of question types – T/F, Multiple Choice, Short Answer
53
What is the cost?
• Qwizdom – only works within Powerpoint and other slide programs - $1250
• ActiveExpression from Promethean - $2500
54
More Info• Description of clickers and how to use
them
http://dmc.umn.edu/technologies/srs.shtml
• 7 Things You Should Know About Clickers - http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7002.pdf
• More articles - http://timac.wikispaces.com/Clickers
BREAK
56
How has the Web changed in the last 5
years?• Easy to create a Web site
• Anyone can have a blog
• Comment on each other’s blog posts, photos, videos, bookmarks
• “Watch” what other people are doing, thinking, reading, talking about
• Your network now includes “strangers”! (and strangers are not so strange)
Audio Online
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Podcasts
• Audio files posted on the Internet
• One can subscribe and listen on personal device
• Examples of Adult Ed Podcasts (link)
• Your favorite Web site (ex. NPR.com)
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VoiceThread
• OTAN’s Web-based Activities (link)
• group conversations are collected and shared in one place from anywhere in the world
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Audio drop box by CLEAR
• Michigan State University, Center for Language Education and Research
• Rich Internet Application Software (link)
61
Drop.io
• Electronic drop-box
• Phone in, leave a message• Converted to
an .mp3 file you can rename and download
Video Online
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YouTube for Education
• Teachertube, youtube, schooltube, etc.
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Streaming Video for Education
• Need fast Internet Connection
• Numerous video services applicable to education
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OTAN Video Gallery
• Technology Integration
• Students Succeed Stories• History of
California Adult Ed
Moodle
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What is Possible in Moodle?
• Documents• Slides• Links to media• Discussions• Quizzes• Examples
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What is Moodle?
• Course management system
• Open source – free to download
• Some support issues
• Programmers are always developing new “modules”
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What Does OTAN Offer?
• Get your own Moodle course shell
• Get trained – online or face-to-face
• Up to 2 active courses
• Up to 25 tech support calls for free
• Can request customized school Moodle site
• More than 2 courses – need service agreement
Blogs
What’s your experience with blogs?
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Blogs in the Classroom
• How– Writing assignments– Journaling– Comment on each other’s blogs
• Why– Publish– Share– Get feedback
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Where to find examples
• Webtwopointohinadulted.wikispaces.com
• Overview and articles about blogs
• Teacher blogs and student blogs
• Examples from different program areas
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Free Blog Sites
• Edublogs (Word Press)– http://edublogs.org/
• Blogger– http://www.blogger.com/
• 21 Classes– http://www.21classes.com/
• LiveJournal– http://www.livejournal.com/
Wikis
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Wikis in the Classroom
• Use for collaborative projects• Can collaborate across distance• Can add graphics, slide shows,
videos, widgets• Easy to add and link pages• Can give each student a page, or
pages
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Blogs vs Wikis
• Usually a single author
• Reverse chronological structure
• Usually personal• External links• Compose online
• Usually many authors
• Stucture determined by content
• Usually objective• Internal & external
links• Compose online
Courtesy of Bernie Dodge, San Diego State University
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Wikis
• Editable Web pages
• Wikipedia– http://www.wikipedia.org/
• Adult Literacy Education– http://wiki.literacytent.org/index.php/Main_Page
• More examples– http://webtwopointohinadulted.wikispaces.com/
Wikis
Social Networking
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What is a Social Networking Site?
• A Web site that allows users to connect, communicate and/or share information with each other
By Moonjazz, http://www.flickr.com/photos/moonjazz/651498439/
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Examples of Social Networking
• Blogs, Vlogs, Miniblogs, Microblogs• Del.icio.us, Magnolia, Diigo • Facebook, MySpace• Yahoo Groups, Ning• Flickr, YouTube, TeacherTube• RSS, Google Reader• LibraryThing, Shelfari• FriendFeed, SocialThing
From premiardeigo, http://www.flickr.com/photos/9119028@N05/591163479/
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“Traditional” Social Networking
• MySpace – OBT example
• Facebook – Used more by college students– 500 groups related to
ESL!
• Yahoo Groups
From mattkeefe - http://www.flickr.com/photos/fil/3151423/
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New Social Networking• Ning
– A list of social network sites for education– English teachers in Mexico– Classroom 2.0– Go to the wiki
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Keeping up with your network
• Aggregators, Feeds
• My Yahoo
• Google Reader
• Jaiku, Friendfeed, SocialThing
• Go to the wiki
Social Bookmarking
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Bookmarking and Tagging
• How you save sites now
• Bookmarking
• Tagging
• Tag clouds
• Go to the wiki
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Del.icio.us
• Video
• Examples
• Tagging
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Diigo
• Highlighting
• Sharing
• Groups and Lists
Thank you!