Monday, April 19, 2010
Blog Post #12
I'm not sure yet what the next technological skill that I want to learn is but this class has made me feel far more open to learning anything technological than I used to be. I guess, lately, I have been interested in video blogging. My boyfriend and I have been talking about making one about how to live comfortable when you're in college and therefore poor. And I think that having to keep this blog has made me more open to making one on my own. And I also think that the research skills that I've learned have made me feel like I can find anything my heart desires. Truthfully, I even get my grocery list offline (If you're as neurotic as me: http://www.grocerylists.org/ultimatest/).
I think that this sort of independent exploration is exactly how I'm going to be able to achieve whatever technological goal I end up setting for myself. I also think that having friends who are really into computers, programing, ect, will also be helpful, and, absolutely being surrounded by young children who know more about this stuff than I do - for sure! - will also be very helpful to me in coming up with and achieving a technological goal.
Blog Post #11
However, I think that since I intend to be working with 12-14-year-olds, I might feel more comfortable with them using something like this since that same reliance on e-mail hasn't been built up. I'm not sure. I have been really interested lately in working with students in Title 1-type schools and I sometimes wonder how much out of class computer stuff I can do due to the typical socio-economic status of most students. I think that if I'm at a school where most kids have a computer in their home or a cell phone that gets text messages, then I'd more than likely use it, but if not, I guess then, I wouldn't.
I would use it because I do think it is a useful educational tool. I think it's a really easy way to allow students easy access to information from their teacher. I do, however, also see how this could become a problem. I guess I've always been a work-at-work kind of person. I think it's useful, however, because students can get the information that they may have forgotten very easily, which would be especially nice if a student were sick that day. However, I also see how that could create a reliance on it. And I think that it is important to teach students to remember their tasks. I do, however, mostly feel like it would be worth a try.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Blog Post #10
I am really interested in using Diigo and have actually been using it myself lately for a few papers that I’ve been writing. I think it is a great source for keeping yourself organized. For a long time, I was really neurotic about printing things out so I could have a tangible hard copy of my sources but when my printer ran out of ink that became a problem. However, this website is great because I don’t have to be on my own computer to find all the things I had been doing research on.
I think this will be great for eighth grade English students. Kids no longer desire a hard copy of things because so many of them grow up with computers in a way that is so different from how I did. Using this cleanly organized source, they can do research at school and access it at home or in the public library. It is very simple and incredibly easy to understand how to use. I think this will be very helpful when it comes to teaching students how to write research papers.
I absolutely think web 2.0 technology is not only useful but also necessary in K-12 education. I think, however, one thing that would be very helpful would be for students to learn web etiquette. That was something I had to learn by making mistakes and many of my friends have shared the same thing with me. However, I think that computers in daily life are no long something of a privilege, but rather a fact. Students are going to need to know how to use one in order to succeed in any job or career that they enter into.