Saturday, August 31, 2013

It's A Brave New World

This is year 3 of the flipped math class and I am starting to incorporate more flipped aspects to my history classes.

I love google forms.  One of the things I have struggled with is how to make sure that the students watch the videos.  Google forms is the answer to that question.  It takes a bit of time to set up a Google form for each video but it is going to be worth it.  I added a section to my website entitled Tonight's Video.  Now when students go to my website there will hopefully be no confusion over what video to watch.  After watching the video there is a form directly below it for the students to fill out.

My students are getting used to using the Google form and need to make sure to hit the submit button at the end.  I had 16 of 18 of my math students submit the form through correctly after showing them how to do access it in class.  It seems like they really will follow through more consistently with the form feedback coming to me.

In my World History and Non-Western Culture classes I decided to have the students preview the chapter before they start to read it.  I have included the PowerPoint video summary of the topic for the students to watch.  They then will again fill out the form at the bottom.  The form a a bit more generic than the math one and asks the following:  what were three things you learned,  what were two things you found that were interesting, and what is one question that you have on the top.

I can't wait for the feedback from the kids.  Hopefully it will really help them preview the info even before they need to start doing the reading.  

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Over 16000 views and still picking up speed

The year is over half done and I have not updated yet.  Strange but true.  I have been having a lot of success with my math class in the second year run through.  I think that the students in the other math class that has another teacher is a bit jealous of the amount of homework.  Most of the views that I have are still from math and I have not made extra math videos this year.  Thankfully math does no change all that much in a year although I am wondering about how the Common Core standards are going to affect what things I need to teach.

I have put all of my PowerPoints for World History on YouTube.  It was hard to find the images and some of them are pretty basic summaries of the chapters.  However,  some of the kids are using them now.  With most of the chapters from the book now done,  I have about 30 World History videos up and running. 

I have doen some with my Non-Western Culture class but not enough.  I did more with a site called WallWisher to have the students post what they know and what they want to know about the different topics.  Shockingly many of them want to eat food from different countries.

In both of these classes I am just starting to use Google Forms to give the students practice tests to prepare them for the real thing.  So far the students seem to like it and appreciate the extra practice. 

I am greatly looking forward to starting up the kid directed wiki this semester.  We just upgraded our bandwidth and now it should be much easier to have the students all working on the different parts of the wiki with video, links, and images than it was before.  

Sunday, June 10, 2012

The Year Is Done

Well this school year is over.  I got sidetracked after ICE and did not post as much as I should have.  Sorry about that.

This year has been quite a journey.  Made a lot of progress, and made a lot of mistakes.

I feel pretty good about next year already from my math curriculum videos.  I am going to have to set them up and refine them more,  but going into the year I have a big head start.

I wish I had started planning on being interesting instead of just methodical.  That would have made it more likely for the students to watch the videos.

One of my goals of the summer is to sit back and take it all in.  Once I do I will post some more of the things I wish I would have done differently and set up a plan for next year.




Sunday, March 4, 2012

ICE in the rear view mirror

So it has been a little bit since I last posted.  It has been a little crazy in my personal life and then there was the prep I had to do for the ICE technology conference.It has been pretty exciting but draining.  

I planned to do a great job at the ICE conference for my presentation on "Flipping Classes Using Videos and Wikis".   Here is a link to the PowerPoint that I used. I was all set and even did a run through in the room I was presenting in before my session.   Everything looked great and I had about 90 people listening to me.  The first part went fine and then I opened a link and then nothing happened.  So I had to continually try to pivot from showing wiki that I could not show and going over PowerPoint slides that did not have the visuals to go along with them.  Just about everybody stayed for the full session and I still think that they got 3-4 good ideas from the presentation so I guess that it was OK.  But it could have been so much better.  Oh well live and learn and I should try to remember next time to prepare for an internet cataclysm by taking bunches of screen shots to at least show the info to the audience.

Update - Video count is now up to over 5000.  Averaging close to 1000 hits a month now and picking up speed.   I have fallen behind a couple of times on videos and had to have the kids do something else that night.  A lot of it had to do with technological issues that meant that it took longer than expected to record.
 

 

Thursday, February 9, 2012

4000+

I am up to 87 videos on my YouTube account.  And right now I am at 4371 views.  I have been crazy busy with family stuff but still have found time to record all of my math lessons and a few history ones too.  It has been a lot easier to track who is watching the videos with the quizzes I am giving at the start of each class. The feedback has been good overall and when I was not able to go to work today due to water backing up in my basement,  I had the students watch the video from the previous night.  That way the substitute was able to review with them by just hitting a key on the computer.

In history class the students ask me frequently when they can work on the wiki page.  For both the 6th and 7th Graders we have been going to the computer lab once a week. Now that they have a handle on how to do it they are getting better and faster. I did have to remind the students about what constitutes an appropriate source to use when we were on the unit on Islam.  For the flags, one came up with a crescent and a swastika.  So we had a discussion about what is OK to use and what is not. 

I had a similar discussion with the students from my Non-Western Culture class and we got onto the topic of Wikipedia.  Now I love Wikipedia and use it almost every day but I know the flaws and I wanted to make sure that my students did too. I showed them the Colbert Report episode when he talked about the made up word wikiality to talk about how Wikipedia can be changed if enough people agree to a change even if it is counter-factual. Then I made the mistake of mentioning that a few years ago students had gone onto our school's Wikipedia page and altered it to say that they were notable alumni who had great made up careers at the age of 17.  And of course within hours a couple of my students figured out how to add all of their names to the school's page and recognize them all as Nobel Prize winners.  I chuckled inside but got them to change it before anyone saw.  I also had got to remind them that as moderator of the site I can see everything that they do on it.  They were kind of bummed when I told them that I knew about the messages they were sending each other through the wikispaces site. I enjoy teaching them but they can be a handful.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Techno-Tragedy

I love the new school and the room that I work in.  I there are only a couple of periods a week that I need to be out of it.  So when I sat down and started to record my math lessons for the day for the students to watch on Tuesday I had a plan.  Unfortunately it got derailed when my microphone did not work.  I tried it on a couple of different computers but now it is in the garbage.  So I did not record the lesson ahead of time for the first time this year.  Oh well I think that the students were fine.  We went over 3 lessons on Tuesday anyhow because it they were all about the basic definitions of geometry (rays,  lines, angles, and triangles).  It was pretty easy and we skipped over the one lesson that I do not like in the book on constructing angle and segment bisectors. I was kind of disappointed I had a great picture of Samuel Jackson to talk about when we went over planes.  It was from "Snakes on a Plane"  so I was pretty sure the kids would find it funny. I got a new set of headphones so I recorded today.  

The Sixth Graders started on the wiki process on Tuesday and worked on it today as well.  After giving the 7th Graders total freedom to create something on Japan,  I realized that the students needed a little more guidance.  Within the project set up, each has a page where they can put stuff.  They needed to find material on the four chapters that we are studying about the successors to the Roman Empire (Germans, Franks, Irish and Anglo-Saxons, and Vikings).  They seemed pretty into it.  I did have limit the amount of "Deadliest Warrior" video time in the computer lab.  It was fine providing it was on topic but once they started roaming and looking at other episodes I re-focused their attention on the topic.  Some of the students had set up the pages in the wrong section and I was able to easily change them to the right place by cutting and pasting.  They were all into the project but some got it quicker than others as expected.  Good start and a good way of reviewing some material that I have always found kind of boring.  We are probably going to go back again tomorrow and I will likely take the 7th Graders to so they can work on their Japan pages.  Two of my kids have been adding stuff in their spare time for fun.  Now that is buy in from the students. 
   

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Halfway Home and All Hail the Power of the Wiki

           So the semester is over and I am currently working on grade reports.  I started working with the students on the wiki pages in my Non-Western Culture (7th Grade).  We are working on Japan and we went as a class down to the new computer lab to start talking about the wiki. I set up accounts for each of the students and it really was pretty easy once I added the word griffin at the end of their first name and the initial of their last name  (like: joesgriffin).  I had divided the students into project and showed them how to set up the wiki.  I showed them how to add videos, links, and pictures and to edit the text.  After going through it a couple of times I let them just start to play.  They leaped right in and immediately got started. The started grabbing things from all over the place.  I had divided the students into groups that I knew would work well together, but showed them how they need to save their work so they do not over write each others work. One group decided to focus on sushi,  another group on WW2, another group on the tsunami, and another one on ninjas. Some of the students just started putting additional random stuff they liked.  It was a beautiful, amorphous mess.  We only had about 10 minutes of them finding stuff and they did not want to leave when the bell rang.
           The next day they came in and wanted to go back down to use the computers again.  We could not use them but then something unexpected happened.  I have two students who want to use their computer all of the time in class.  Now that we have a better wireless system they are on them in class adding stuff to some of the lectures that I give whch is great. One of these students is very much a self starter who I really have to make sure to challenge,  the other student is smart but hard to motivate. So both of them came in and said that they had spent some of the rest of the day adding links to the wiki so they could share them with the other students.  It felt awesome seeing how excited they were and once I went on to see what they added it was great to see the results.  They needed to tweak things a little bit and I am going to have to suggest to them that they organize the page a little more clearly so it is easier to follow but it was great to have such a buy in from the students. 

   This coming week I am going to try to set up the wiki for the 6th graders.  I am once again going to not provide a lot of structure partially so they can play a little and get to know the system.  So they will be focusing on the groups that came after the Roman Empire including the Franks, Germans, Vikings, Irish and Anglo-Saxons.  We will have read the chapters from the book but this way they will hopefully be able to explore in a way that they are interested in and enthusiastic about.

In math,  if I look at the progress of the students I am happy.  The average grade for the second quarter was 85%.  I think that that is the highest average I have had overall.  I did stuff differently but my sense is that this has been a really good quarter. I am going to talk the students on Tuesday about what if any changes they think should be made to the class.