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Integrating Technology for the K-12 Teacher
INTC 3610
INTRODUCTIONS
Business/Technology Teacher – Southern Regional HS
Years in Education: 29BS –Business Administration – Monmouth
UniversityMA – Masters of Art – Instructional
Technology – Stockton College
Sharon Faith
Sharon Faith609-709-3970 Cell609-597-9481 vm 2272
[email protected]@srsd.net
Websitehttps://sites.google.com/site/sharonfaith3610/
Contact Information
NameMajorFreshman, sophomore, junior, senior
Future occupationWhat technology(ies) do use in your daily life.
What About YOU
September 10, 2010
INTC 3610
Instructor: Sharon Faith
Tools for the Classroom
ChalkboardsPrior to chalkboards all students had slate boards. The
teacher was required to write the lesson on each one.By 1853 chalkboards were widely used in classrooms
across America. It was the beginning of mass education.
Chalkboard Innovations
Colored chalk
Interactive SMART BOARD
White Board
Visual Instruction Movement - 1910During the Visual Instruction
Movement, film, slides and photographs were used in schools to educate students.
The motion picture projector became one of the first technological devices used in schools.
Thomas Edison predicted in 1913 that books would become obsolete and the motion picture would become the primary medium of teaching. Of course, that prediction was incorrect.
http://www.ehow.com/info_8416115_technology-during-1900s-schools.html#
AUDIO – Radio - 1925New York City’s Board
of Education was actually the first organization to send lessons to schools through a radio station. Over the next couple of decades, “schools of the air” began broadcasting programs to millions of American students.
AUDIO Innovations
Based on the theory of “repetitive drill” schools began to install listening stations that used headphones and audio tapes. Most were used in what were dubbed ‘language labs’ and this practice is still in use today, except now computers are used instead of audio tapes.
1950’s
2012
Thousands of educational podcasts are available in iTunes. You can even create your own.
iPod Touch
Television – 50’sThe Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) decided to set aside 242 educational channels.
The Ford Foundation spent $170 million for educational instruction.
The only content was teachers giving lectures.
Money ran out…no more push for televisions.
Television Innovations
VHS
STREAMING VIDEO
One website- Discovery Education - has over 100,000 learning objects all tied directly to state and national standards available for streaming.
Television shows available 1 day after airing. My Entrepreneurship class can watch Shark Tank on a projected screen.
MEDIA CONTENT
Computers
Release January 1983Apple 2e
Skinner Teaching Machine 1953
http://youtu.be/jTH3ob1IRFo
Computer Innovations
Desktop
Laptop
iPad
Smartphones
Ava
ilab
le 2
012
eReaders
“THE INTERNET”Internet
commercialized in 1995
First wave – static information on pages
Second wave - Interactive – used to create and collaborate
Third wave – idk
INTERNET Innovations -Cloud computing-Wireless-Skyping-Access from mobile devices-Social Media Twitter Facebook Blogging-Speed – Global 2.6 Mbps Korean 15.7 Mbps US 6.7 Mbps (in 2000 56kbps dial up)
HORIZON REPORT 2012 k-12 EditionCreated by the New Media Consortium,
Consortium for School Networkingthe International Society for Technology in
Education.It identifies and describes emerging
technologies likely to have a large impact over the coming five years in education around the globe.
2012 K-12 Edition, examines emerging technologies for their potential impact on and use in teaching, learning, and creative inquiry within the environment of pre-college education.
Route 21
21st Century Skills
Available technologies change our relationship with information and thus, suggest changes in educational goals.
Less memorization, and focus more on higher order skills such as analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.
Technologies give us the means to work smarter and learn more effectively.
21st Century Skills – Route 21
Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Creativity and Innovation Communication and Collaboration
21 Century - Skills needed -
One Sunday New York Times Newspaper holds more information then a student in 1880 would get in a LIFETIME.
Information is doubling every 5.5 years, according to the American Association of School Librarians (AASL), technical information is doubling every two years.
21st Century -Information Literacy
NJ Technology STANDARDS
All students will use digital tools to access, manage, evaluate, and synthesize information in order to solve problems individually and collaboratively and to create and communicate knowledge.
A. Technology Operations and Concepts B. Creativity and InnovationC. Communication and Collaboration D. Digital CitizenshipE. Research and Information Literacy F. Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and
Decision-Making
8.1 Educational Technology
ISTE
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR
TECHNOLOGY in EDUCATION
1. Creativity and Innovation
Students demonstrate creative thinking, construct knowledge, and develop innovative products and processes using technology.
ISTE *Nets Standards for STUDENTS
2. Communication and Collaboration
Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others.
NETS Students
3. Research and Information Fluency
Students apply digital tools to gather, evaluate, and use information.
Nets Students
4. Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, and Decision Making
Students use critical thinking skills to plan and conduct research, manage projects, solve problems, and make informed decisions using appropriate digital tools and resources.
Nets Students
5. Digital Citizenship
Students understand human, cultural, and societal issues related to technology and practice legal and ethical behavior.
Nets Students
6. Technology Operations and Concepts
Students demonstrate a sound understanding of technology concepts, systems, and operations.
Nets Students
CreativityCollaborationCritical ThinkingCommunication
Common Theme is Standards
BLOGGING
A blog is a personal diary. A daily pulpit.A collaborative space. A political soapbox. A breaking-news outlet.A collection of links. Your own private thoughts.
What is a Blog?
Who blogs? …Anyone who wants toWhat to blog about…something that matters.Why do people blog…so their voice is heardHow do you get started? …Find a FREE
blogging site Edublogs,
Wordpress
EDUBLOG10 Ways to Use eduBLOG
Questions on Blogging
Provide information anytime and anywherePost assignments, events, class projects, etc.Acts a parent information portalUse with group projects, school newspapers,
class websites, reflection journals, and more.
Blogging in Education
10 Ways to use Edublog
Go to Edublog.org And create an account
Edublog -