Showing posts with label technology in the classroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology in the classroom. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2009

Wiki 101

For the last few weeks I have enjoyed the opportunity of teaching four home school students and have been using a wiki, a digital technology tool that is included in the second edition of Teaching the Story. If you're not familiar with a wiki, take a few minutes to watch this fun video. Or, check out this informative video that tells you about additional features. Very simply, a wiki is an editable website (think Wikipedia) which opens up worlds of possibilities for your classroom. (There are several free wiki hosts including www.pbwiki.com, www.wetpaint.com, and www.wikispaces.com. I have preferred the first for its ease of use and support services.)

Before our first class, I set up our class wiki and sent out an e-mail inviting the students to each create a page introducing themselves to one another. I encouraged them to upload a favorite picture so they could begin exploring the wiki's potential. Since I gave them all access to the wiki as writers, they theoretically could change someone else's work. As a result, it was important in our first class to discuss the responsibility and trust involved in using a wiki.

During the second week, I encouraged them to leave comments for one another about their descriptive paragraphs. I also created folders for each student for their weekly writing assignments which helped organize the wiki and helped us all to find a writer's work. In addition, I created my folder in which I leave their writing assignments. I use this folder to hold handouts which I upload from the Teaching the Story resource CD; they are responsible to print these out and bring them to class. This has been a great tool as it gives them responsibility to accumulate and organize their materials.

During the third class we played a writing and revising game, "Jazz it Up" and I showed them how to use editing tools such as the cross-out function and red font to edit and revise on the wiki. The process of critiquing each other's work strengthens them as writers as they must think: "What is wrong with this writing?", "How could I help make this writing better?" and "How can I avoid this mistake in the future?" Doing this with a spirit of co-operation also teaches students to respect one another and enhances collaborative work.

If you look in the girls' folders, you'll see that a lot of interaction goes on during non-class time. Since the class is small, I am encouraging them to each read, comment, and edit one another's work at least once a week. This amount of interaction would not be possible in a typical classroom and you would probably need to establish small groups of editing partners that were responsible to give each other feedback. Since the class will only meet eight times, the wiki allows me to instruct and provide input into the students' work while they are writing their stories, thus maximizing the entire learning experience.

Wikis are a way to help you cultivate the stories which your students write. As for myself, I would love to lead more home school and school workshops, so please contact me through this blog if you are interested in setting up a writing workshop for your students.

Write on!

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Wednesday, October 1, 2008

The Second Edition is Here!


I'm excited to announce that Teaching the Story: Fiction Writing in Grades 4-8 is now at the printers. You can order this expanded version from Maupin House at 10% off the cover price of $23.95 until mid-October. Not only will you find more ideas on how to teach short fiction to 4th & 5th graders, but there are almost 20 new technology mini-lessons that infuse technology into the writing process maximizing differentiation in your classroom. You and your students will enjoy learning how wikis, podcasts, and virtual worlds can help them jazz up their writing and create more well-written and original fiction. Steve Johnson, a technology facilitator in North Carolina who I met at NCCAT, did a great job writing the technology mini-lessons. I can't wait for all of you to see what a fine addition these tech lessons are to the book.


Let me know when you get your copy!
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Thursday, July 10, 2008

Integrating Technology into Your Classroom

I don't know about you, but I am easily overwhelmed with the amount of information that is available on the Internet. Add to information overload all of the new technologies that can be used in the classroom and it is easy to feel like crawling inside a cave, rolling a boulder in front, and taking a nice long nap. Like it or not, that's not an option for today's teachers. Yesterday I found some help for fellow educators: the oldest children's publication on the web, MidLink Magazine.

Established in October, 1994, MidLink, is jointly sponsored by NC State University and the University of Central Florida. I encourage you to take a look at their projects page and archives for free projects to help you integrate technology with language arts, geography, math, science….you name it!...into your classroom.

"What does skillful technology integration look like? What are the outcomes of a successful technology project? What does the student work actually look like? What learning outcomes can teachers hope to accomplish with their students?" These are the questions which are answered in this valuable resource that is visited by teachers, students, and parents at the rate of 5,000 – 10,000 per month.

I'm looking forward to the second edition of Teaching the Story coming out in September. It will include more than 15 mini-lessons, written by Steve Johnson, showing teachers how to use wikis, digital cameras, Interactive whiteboards, MP3 players, etc, to enhance the process of writing short fiction. Along with the great projects provided by MidLink, I hope it will prompt more teachers to crawl out of the cave and into the digital classroom.

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Saturday, February 2, 2008

Technology Toys & Tools



Last month when I was a presenter at NWRESA, I used this AVerVersion Document camera for the first time. After completing their "assignments" teachers used the camera to project their writing unto a screen so that everyone could comment on it. WOW! I found it to be a great tool for allowing everyone to give feedback to the writer who could then revise her work accordingly. I was impressed as I realized the classroom possibilities; little did I know about the range of technology toys and tools that can enhance writing instruction.

Spin forward two weeks. Today I talked with Steve Johnson, a technology facilitator who I met at NCCAT. He is writing the technology mini-lessons for the second edition of Teaching the Story. We are also writing a proposal for the National Gifted conference in Tampa next November entitled, "Beyond the Keyboard: Incorporating Technology into your Writing Curriculum." I am so excited about the possibilities that will open up as students use not only document cameras, but wiki's, MP3 players, Powerpoints, and a host of other technology that Steve is dreaming up to teach fiction writing. Stay tuned for updates!

For all of you who have already bought a copy of my book, I'll make sure that you receive these technology lessons also. Just e-mail me with and I'll pass your name along to Maupin House.

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Friday, January 25, 2008

From the Mountains to the Sea





Two weeks ago I was in Cullowhee, NC for the NCCAT seminar; today I'm in Kiawah, SC presenting at the South Carolina Council of the Teachers of English. Believe it or not, it is colder along the coast of South Carolina than it was in the mountains! Such is the unpredictability of Carolina weather. Highlights of this conference have been:

  • The genuine warmth and hospitality of the SC teachers. They are an enthusaistic group of educators.
  • Meeting Art Young, the keynote speaker and one of the leaders in the field of Writing across the Curriculum. This morning he addressed the links between reading, writing, technology, and conversational learning. I was fascinated by the interaction of SC high school students; Clemson University students; and Sweden's Chalmers University of Technology students as they read T.S. Elliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and discussed it through a blog. What a remarkable way for students to think critically and be challenged by students from other peer groups and cultures!
  • Meeting a friend of Julie Graddy, Maupin House's publisher, from 30 years ago when they were friends in Gainesville, Florida. I sat next to her at lunch and within 3 minutes we'd found a connection. Small world.
  • Signing Teaching the Story—always fun!
  • Learning more about wikis and blogs. Technology in the classroom, as many of you know, is staring us in the face. The second edition of Teaching the Story will have several mini-lessons on using technology to teach students how to write fiction. Stay tuned for more details!
  • Walking by the ocean at sunset, where waves combed the beach leaving tendrils of sand to be washed away in tomorrow's tide.
  • Finding a perfect miniature conch shell which I will save for my granddaughter, Ebby.

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