19
Toward a Paperless Classroom John A. Cook Technology Coordinator Computer Science Teacher Turpin High School Forest Hills School District [email protected]

Toward a Paperless Classroom

  • Upload
    keitha

  • View
    36

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Toward a Paperless Classroom . John A. Cook Technology Coordinator Computer Science Teacher Turpin High School Forest Hills School District j [email protected]. Digital Handouts & Assignments. New Challenges How to Teach: PowerPoints , Online Texts … - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Toward a Paperless Classroom

John A. CookTechnology Coordinator

Computer Science TeacherTurpin High School

Forest Hills School [email protected]

Page 2: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Digital Handouts & Assignments

• New Challenges– How to Teach: PowerPoints, Online Texts …– How to Distribute : Network, Web, E-mail?– How to Grade: Office Inking, Spreadsheets …

• New Benefits– Improved Navigational Skills– Better Hierarchical Skills (drives, folders, files)– Less time at Copier & Saving trees

Page 3: Toward a Paperless Classroom

The Digital Classroom (Ideal)

• Teacher computer connected to Projector• Each Student with own Computer• Network with shared, public Drive• School Web site with Teacher/Class pages• Student E-mail accounts w/ Digital Locker• Course resource materials on CD & Computers• Classroom Printer, Scanner, WebCam• Students computers able to use Projector

Page 4: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Computer Lab (Realistic)

• Students may have to share Computers• Teacher leads activities verbally• Sharing of files through disks, flash drives, etc.• Paper handouts still necessary• Students have personal E-mail account• Textbooks supplemented by Web research• Shared Printer and file storage locally• Assignments printed to turn in for grading

Page 5: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Objectives - Overview

• Distribute reading material, handouts, study guides and assignments electronically

• Students turn in assignments/projects to be graded by teacher and returned in folders

• Tests and Quizzes taken on the computer with prompt grading and feedback

• Understand strengths and limitations of computer network and create solutions

Page 6: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Create Teacher/Class/Student folders on a public network drive or web storage site

Page 7: Toward a Paperless Classroom
Page 8: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Set Permissions for teacher and student users (Building Tech or Tech Coordinator)

Page 9: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Students copy files and read materials posted by teacher on computer screen

Examples include: WORD documents scanned pages, web sites, digital texts, PowerPoints, etc.

Page 10: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Teacher delivers lessons electronically via projector and multimedia

Page 11: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Teacher places worksheets, study guides & assignments in class folder

• Students copy materials to their folder on network, add name, header, etc., SAVE document

• Students complete requested items and SAVE changes by DUE date.

• Turn in documents with name on file in correct folder for class assignment (drag & drop).

• (Example: Mary Smith CH4RevQs in CH4assignments folder)

• Teacher moves folder on Due Date to their own Network drive (Late Folder option).

Page 12: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Teacher grades items (ink if possible) and posts grade on ProgressBook.

Page 13: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Assignments given back to students via assignment folders on public drive

Page 14: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Student learning reinforced using software Project presented in class.

Page 15: Toward a Paperless Classroom
Page 16: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Paperless Classroom Tips/Tricks/Trials

• Grading this way is NOT EASY at first, but persist and you will adapt

• You need to be tuned into students and their activities: they will try to cut corners

• Require your students to put their name on all documents, files and folders

• Need to be creative about naming folders, files, assignments, etc.

• Full adoption of this may be impossible, but some may help both you and kids.

Page 17: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Use File-Properties to check created & modified dates (to within a second).

Page 18: Toward a Paperless Classroom

I said: Toward a Paperless Classroom!

Page 19: Toward a Paperless Classroom

Toward a Paperless Classroom

John A. CookTechnology Coordinator

Computer Science TeacherTurpin High School

Forest Hills School [email protected]

Link to this Presentation for download:http://www.foresthills.edu/olcClassView.aspx?classID=570

(Click “Links and Downloads” under Classroom Info)