Archive for August, 2006

Digital Story Telling

Wednesday, August 16th, 2006

Teaching is always new to me, and I am continually fascinated by my students’ creativity and learning. The opportunity to empower my students through thier involvement in community issues, and to help them find relevance in history by connecting it to today interests me; mixing this with new technological approaches makes it even more exciting for us all.

~Michelle Forman, High School Teacher

Digital storytelling can take a variety of forms, but what truly makes it a powerful medium? There are a variety of programs out there from MovieMaker to PowerPoint to Producer to Photostory 3. However, simply because there are free tools available certainly does not mean that we, as educators, need to use the newest and greatest software out there just because we can. While there is a place for it, I can’t tell you how many times I see students required to spit information out through MovieMaker instead of PowerPoint with the assumption that the student has learned more.

No, I believe that it is imperative to focus on the instructional content and that it is imperative that we search for avenues that allow students to be drawn into our educational environment. What is important to them and how does that intersect with the curriculum? This certainly does not mean that we only teach what the students want - absolutley not. There are many topics that our students may not be aware of or that they may not have thought through to which they can directly identify.

What amazes me is how involved students get when they start to investigate the stories around them. Take, for example, the immigration issue that came to the fore in the spring of 2006. Our students (here in Texas) became very engaged with this specific social issue - and teachers leapt on the opportunity to help enable students.

I did not have to stretch to find the connection between social justice and state standards. I did not spend my free time with my manuals and try to “fit” social justice in. Rather, I made the mandated curriculum “fit” into the social justice pedagogy and practice that I was using with my students on a daily basis. When we had to manipulate and compute very large (up to billions) and very small (decimals) numbers, we looked at census information, the number of Native Americans that were killed, infected with disease, or relocated to reservations, the amount of money corporations make as compared to the wages of the working class that those corporations employ and exploit.

~Laurence Tan, Teacher, Los Angeles

So, it’s time to get creative … find out how we can enable our students to change the world … and how that passion is tied to our history, the beauty of mathematics, fluid writing and reading, scientific history and knowledge and beyond.

Border Studies Curriculum

Tuesday, August 15th, 2006

The Center for Latin American and Border Studies provides Border Studies Curriculum in the form of 20 lesson plans. Looks like these have some great potential for modification and use through a number of subject areas.

Real Teaching, Real World

Tuesday, August 15th, 2006

So, I ran a cynical Google search today (yes, I continue to add to Google’s growing data set and power) with the search terms: teaching, teachers, to, teach, real, life, connections. I NEVER search with so many ‘AND’ terms and was really just expecting a bunch of junk results that claimed to have the answers to teaching with real world connections. (in truth, I was planning to point out all the junk out there - jokes on me!)
Enter this website result: Rethinking Mathematics

While the result is promoting a published book, I quickly started to glean ideas from topics posted within. In fact, the quote that sucked me in was this:

I thought math was just a subject they implanted on us just because they felt like it, but now I realize that you could use math to defend your rights and realize the injustices around you.… [N]ow I think math is truly necessary and, I have to admit it, kinda cool. It’s sort of like a pass you could use to try to make the world a better place.

— Freida, ninth grade, Chicago Public Schools

Don’t'cha’ just love it?? Example classroom scenario titles got my brain churning:

  • Mortgage OKs tougher for local blacks, Latinos
  • The War in Iraq : How Much Does it Cost?
  • Reading the World With Math
  • Justice for Janitors

So, why don’t we stir up some trouble in our classrooms, engage our students in issues that really matter to them and help them to start changing the world? You know I’m gonna get this one to read…

Well, well, well… (Global Health and Data Interpretation)

Thursday, August 10th, 2006

It took Gapminder.com to get me back online and posting! Thanks to Darren Wilson (who also put together InspiredClassrooms.net) for emailing this link to me: http://tedblog.typepad.com/tedblog/2006/06/hans_rosling_on.html

First, this 20 minute video is well worth the watch just for the purpose of informing one self about global health issues and global trends. Second, the way this professor presents the data is beyond phenomenal. Take a look at the video and then take a look at Gap Minder.

Good stuff…