Sunday, June 28, 2015

Participation in Challenges

The #CLMOOC experience includes regular challenges as well as some spontaneous ones that come about from others going through the process.  It can be a little chaotic, but I can participate in as many or as few as I please.  Each one brings me thoughts, ideas, and reflections on my own students (more on that in a later post).

Some that I have participated in are:


The theme this week is Unmaking Introductions. Let’s consider the ways we name, present, and represent ourselves and the boundaries or memberships those introductions create.
How do we name ourselves in different contexts—personally? professionally? online? 
What happens when those contexts converge? 
How might we take apart our introductions to answer some of these questions? 
What will happen when we put them back together again to share them in CLMOOC?


I am going to admit that I wanted something easy right now.  For me, the description of Make #1 was complicated, so I wanted an easy interpretation (I'll try something else in a couple of days).

So here is my Unmake intro.  I used http://portwiture.com and entered in my Twitter handle.  It came up with this lovely visual.  It created an intro that I never would have thought of on my own.  I like the "unmade me" :)

"Portwiture grabs photography from Flickr that matches the content of your most recent Twitter updates. The result is a serendipitous visual representation of your Twitter profile."








From a participant:  "...playlist of music that defines us could be another way of connecting. Think about ONE SONG that defines you right now, in the past, in the future. Perhaps the lyrics speak to you. Perhaps it's a song that helped you through a tough time. The We Are #CLMOOCplaylist is collaborative."

My contribution, keeping in the Maker spirit of the project, is If I Had a Hammer by Peter, Paul, and Mary.




#F5F (Find Five Fridays)
Find five people you have connected with.




Comic from:  Mimi & Eunice





What object or material best represents you?

Interesting question... "Select an everyday object or material as your personal symbol. What object or material did you choose, and what might it signify about you? "
I chose STEEL. My father was a sheet metal worker and STEEL was the first material that came to mind when reading the initial question. So I looked up the properties of steel and found: Strength, Toughness, Ductility (how flexible you are before cracking under pressure), Weldability (combine & form harmonious, effective whole), and Durability. Yep, the material I identify with is steel!








C. Dweck Mindset based



#abundance
A weekly photography challenge, this week was abundance.

My contribution:  An abundance of squares over my head marking the delineation between life on the deck and the freedom of the skies.





Here is the game.  "The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows is a compendium of invented words written by John Koenig. Each original definition aims to fill a hole in the language—to give a name to emotions we all might experience but don’t yet have a word for."  So sayeth Koenig on his site.  Maybe there is a hole in our own language and this is a place to talk about these feelings."







Saturday, June 27, 2015

Twitter Chat ONE #CLMOOC

I planned to lurk and that worked great for a bit.  However, there were so many interesting thoughts and ideas coming out of this chat that I decided to just jump in.  Again, I keep an eye to my own learning environments as I move through the #CLMOOC experience.

By the end of the chat, I needed some serious reflection time to sit (ala Pooh Bear) to think, think, think.  Some of the items I took to ponder:

  • How can we shake up the traditional introductions to have more depth, more interest, more engagement?  CLMOOC used the #untro, yet I think my students need something a little less obscure.
  • Is it better for students to be brought into creative (design thinking) gradually or thrown right into the "deep end of the pool"?
  • Do students feel excluded or is there an inequity when some know how to approach a problem before others?  How can our classrooms ensure all are comfortable trying, failing, succeeding, learning?
  • What about students who meet a challenge with thinking that is solidly "in the box"?  How to get them (can we) thinking along different avenues to find solutions?
  • Can we build in better moments to pause and reflect?  How best to do this in a Makerspace, for example?
This was great as I am really thinking about how to approach the new Makerspace next year to ensure it truly engages the students.  I'm looking forward to sharing these questions with my co-workers!


The Storify for the chat is available HERE.



Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Warrior Knights of Digital Citizenship

My first make for the Make Bank in the CLMOOC:  Warrior Knights of Digital Citizenship.

After participating in the introductions, it was suggested that I put my images into the Make Bank.  I chose the shield and put an idea for a lesson plan with it as I am usually trying to tie everything back to my learning environment.




Sunday, June 21, 2015

Introductions



To begin the CLMOOC experience, I completed some tasks:

  • I introduced myself on the G+ community and included my 1st makes of the summer, a personalized coat of arms and a CLMOOC meme.
  • I added my pin to the CLMOOC map.




















My 1st makes of the summer!  Hi everyone - I'm Christina, you can find me on Twitter as @MrsDi. I am the Director of Technology at a K-8 independent school in southeastern New Hampshire.  We are putting together a Makerspace for next year (very exciting) and I am looking for ideas, resources, and collaborations to help make it work!  


REFLECTION

It may feel silly at first making these types of items, a meme and a coat of arms, but it gets the brain working and creating.  It gets me looking online for resources and finding new tools available for creation.  As I work through a task like this, there is always a part of me that is thinking about how to use it with students (if at all).  Creating a personalized coat of arms could be used in history and reading studies easily, however I wish to think outside of the box.  How about having students create a coat of arms based on who they are as digital citizens?  As for the meme, students could make memes based on idioms, on science lab rules, etc.  I believe that letting students personalize a product helps engage and motivate them.  So yes, it was a bit silly as an adult working on these products, but it was engaging.  Combining that with some curriculum will be interesting!


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Resources:



Saturday, June 20, 2015

Advanced Applications of Instructional Technology

Summer 2015!  It has officially begun as the last day of school for staff was yesterday!

For me, this summer includes my last 2 graduate courses as I complete my 2nd Masters degree.  As a Johns Hopkins University student, I am working on Seminar in Teacher Leadership and Advanced Applications of Instructional Technology (AAIT).  For the latter, I am tasked with completing a program experience outside of the AAIT structure.  My choice is CLMOOC 2015.

CLMOOC = Connected Learning Massive Open Online Collaboration

CLMOOC “is a collaborative, knowledge-building and sharing experience open to anyone interested in making, playing, and learning together about the educational framework known as Connected Learning. CLMOOC provides educators of all types with an opportunity to play with new tools, make projects and friends, and share projects and reflections with colleagues across the country and around the world.”

I am challenged in the undertaking of creating a school Makerspace for the upcoming school year. This includes the design of the space, engaging staff and students with the materials, and ensuring that the activities are effectively integrated throughout the curriculum.  The CLMOOC experience will provide the opportunity to interact and learn with others facing the same challenges.  Additionally, I will have the opportunity to learn from experts in the field.

  • I am very interested in the Maker mindset and engaging students with these projects.  This is not something I am directly studying in my graduate classes and I welcome the opportunity to pursue the topic.
  • A Makerspace can utilize constructivism, project-based learning, collaborative learning, and inquiry-based learning as part of the pedagogical process.  The CLMOOC is based on a collaborative approach with a reflective stance for those taking the course.  It will provide opportunities to what pedagogies are most effective within a Makerspace environment.
  • The CLMOOC is based on 6 weeks of “Make Cycles” which are units of different study topics.  These cycles are technology based, providing opportunities to learn/sharpen technology skills in a collaborative environment.
  • I am the Chair of a Technology Committee that is helping with our Makerspace construction.  Some of the members will be taking the CLMOOC with me.  This will provide new opportunities for me to expand my technology leadership skills as we work through the course together with the Makerspace as a common goal.


Follow my CLMOOC adventures as I post regular updates here on this blog.