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| That's me with the Spice Girls Cassette tap, oh what a fun birthday that was! :) |
| Yes, that's really my Dad! Look how big that is! HA! |
I can remember being in school with chalkboards, overhead projectors…now we have dry erase boards, maybe some of us are lucky to have Smart Boards, we have ELMOS, ceiling projectors, clickers, etc. What is the future bringing us with technology? More importantly, what will it do to education?
If you look around us, today’s
population lives and feeds on technology. We rely on the internet for everyday
things, whether it is work relative or for our own entertainment. We carry our
cell phones/smart phones everywhere we go!
We often ask ourselves, “How did we used to do it?” We can’t remember. We live in a world that is
fast pace and one where everyone expects simultaneous results. We can communicate across the globe! It’s
pretty cool, yet pretty scary at the same time.
So where am I going with this? Let’s
now talk about the education aspect. We
seem to not be bringing the ‘real world’ into the classroom. We are having our
students learn the same way we did, even how our parents did: paper pencil, no
cell phone policy, etc. Is that how the
work force is? Isn’t it our job as educators to prepare our students for
college, the workforce so that they one day can give back to the society in a positive
manner? Some schools are trying to
adapt with the technology, but all of us must do it. We all need to be taking those tiny baby steps and gradually bring
our students to the 21st century mind set in the classroom.
I call myself “tech savvy” when it comes to explaining technological
things to my parents and grandparents because I feel like I have grown and
adapted to the technology throughout my lifetime, I’m young and not
afraid to push buttons and well, I’m working on my MAET. But when it comes to my students, geeezzzz…they
know so much! They know more than me! When I mention the use of technology or allow my students to use it in my classroom, right away my students become more engaged and
motivate to learn. That’s how they learn
outside the classroom, so why not bring it to the classroom. The hard part we have to consider is the
restrictions/rules. It is vital that as educators we have good guidelines, a
rigor structure and procedure that students follow and understand when they can
use their device (know the proper etiquette), what is allowed/not allowed, etc. Some
schools struggle with money issues and are not able to have the nice up-to-date technology, but
almost every one today, especially high school students have some sort of cell
phone/smart phone. That is why for this blog, I focused more on
how we can implement cell phones/smart phones into the classroom (generally speaking the high school classroom).
I recently became a member of Classroom 2.0 and joined the group “Cell Phones in Education.” I read some educators blogs, some I found very informative and others I was sad because they have the mindset that phones shouldn't be used at all in the classroom. I disagree.
I recently became a member of Classroom 2.0 and joined the group “Cell Phones in Education.” I read some educators blogs, some I found very informative and others I was sad because they have the mindset that phones shouldn't be used at all in the classroom. I disagree.
What tools did I try?
When I had my classroom, I let my students use their phones
to read books, check their grades on PowerSchool, blog, tweet, record video,
audio, take pictures, etc. However, most of the time they had to ask for
permission. I think as a teacher, if you
allow students to do these things and trust and respect them with using the
technology, it is almost like an incentive to the students. They like using it;
they don’t want it taken away and will hopefully be dependable and trustworthy
while using it and use it wisely. Cell
phones today can do so much, things I didn’t think would ever be capable.
I have also tried a program called Socrative. Socrative: “is a smart student response system that empowers teachers to engage their classrooms through a series of educational exercises and games via smartphones, laptops, and tablets” (socrative.com) It is very easy to use and fun. However, I used this with iPads not cell phones. It provides instant feedback, collects the student's data into an excel document, allows you to edit and create your own quizzes which can be multiple choice, short answer, fill in the blank...you choose. The kids really enjoyed this. I used it as bell work at least once a week.
What ways am I thinking about integrating mobile technology into YOUR classroom?
Though I have not used this in the classroom, I would love
to. This could be a good warm-up or wrap up.
You could post something like: “What did you learn yesterday? What are
you still having trouble with?” etc. What
I like about it is the instant feedback.
Twitter- A lot of
students have twitter. Some teachers
have shared that they created a twitter account for their students. The teacher posts reminders of tests,
assignments and even funny math jokes! Haha! The teacher that did this used hash
tags of the hour and subject to help clarify what was for what class. It is an instant connection and how we follow
the world today. Great idea! I would love to do this if I had a classroom
right now. I recommend checking out this
article I found about practical advice for teaching with twitter.
I also found an article on 40 quick ways to use mobile
phones in the classroom. Check it out!
What challenges do I foresee?
The challenges that I foresee are those certain students who
will use their cell phone or device for the wrong reason and ruin it for the others.
How to deal with it, the consequences, how to monitor the students, etc.





Thanks for the article on using Twitter with a class. There are some good tips in there. Also, thank you for the Spice Girls flashback! My first cassette was Amy Grant, oh man, what a good one.
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