Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Chapter 4: Design for Knowledge
Chapter 8: Designs for Community
Chapter 9 Assessment
Monday, June 15, 2009
Chapter 7: Information OverLoad
Check out the commercials here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jMt6saTqq4
http://www.bing.com/
As we continue to evolve into a technology-based world, our students need the skills featured in these chapter, just as we have discussed in class. It is no longer having the knowledge intimately that is valued, but being able to find, synthesize, process, apply and teach others the info that is valued. There are certain skills that must be acquired in order to do this (e.g. determine a bad website from a good one to use as a source on a paper) that teachers must begin to instill in their students. It seems that the younger people have become so infused with technology that they have lost this ability to separate themselves and to consider their actions/the information abstractly or de-contextualized. In the news, we have seen a lot of children being arrested for possession of child pornography because they sent someone else a picture of themself naked on Facebook. Or people not getting hired because they have inappropriate my space pages. There is such a thing as being too close to the technology.
Chapter 6: Literacy
http://jayisgames.com/archives/2009/05/llama_adventure.php
http://jayisgames.com/tag/text
Friday, June 12, 2009
Class Discussion that was Cut Short!
Designs for Problem Solving
- This chapter touched on a lot of issues we began to discuss last class period, such as the failure of primary and secondary schools in producing the kind of thinkers that can be successful in the business world
- It opens with a brief comment about Descarte and the “Ghost in the machine” gives a brief history of how we have previously thought about thinking and where we have come to today
- 3 important thinking strategies that need to be developed:
- memory,
- information extending processes (inductive encoding, combination and comparison ((access and excel)),
- and information arranging processes (deductive most used in learning things unfamiliar)
- learning in a non-linear way…..
- memory: as muscle (FLL and math), as canvas, as library; good memorizing means that you can acquire, retain and achieve…..
- memory as a series of networks between concepts in our brains
- concept maps are a tangible activity that is a physical representation of the way in which we remember---think about main ideas, build relationships b/t these ideas, then related to previous concepts and build on it; how many of use concept maps and how do you use them?
- rather than teacher or learn center, education should be problem center
- good problem solving allows students to make a test prediction, inexpensive equipment, complex to elicit multiple problem solving, and benefits them
- bad problem solving doesn’t do those things, when there is no absolutely right way or fixed formula for solving the problem
- isn’t this the best kind? Isn’t this real problem solving? Isn’t there always more than one answer, and isn’t better to reason through the outcomes of the multiple paths or to be able to present something in three different ways rather than just in one
- Activities should be authentic, should build knowledge, constructing activities ask students to make/produce something (observable understanding of knowledge), and sharing
- I’ve definitely seen a huge shift in foreign language learning in using authentic materials/activities in the classrooms, where have you seen shifts?
- being smart in the world of info tech has less to do with knowing something and more to do with knowing how to find information, being able to synthesize the information and teach yourself and/or others, and being able to apply that knowledge in a meaningful/relevant way
- for me the smartest people that I’ve met are the people who can make the connections b/t the concepts and can extend their thoughts throughout history and relevance in a way that is transcending and also like stream of consciousness
Questions:
What is more important activities or problem-solving?
Is too much problem-solving a bad thing?
How can we design more constructed means of evaluation/assessment i.e. in terms of visible learning?
How can teachers become better problem solvers themselves? Should there be more demands on continuing education be placed?
Should we give our students more power in terms of designing their own activities?
How much technology is too much?
Blog Comments:
How can incorporate spreadsheets/access/problem solving in humanities, such as foreign language
learning or reading? Julia in your blog you said “What this course has started to do in my own thinking is reevaluate my use (or lack) of technology in the classroom as a method for designing disciplinary (history) knowledge.”
Marc said “I have found an increased resistance in students' willingness to deal with things that are de-contextualized. Perhaps it's because the internet has brought the realities of the world to students' minds on an unprecedented scale.” What are we loosing with students no longer being able to de-contexutalize? Isn’t this an inherent part of problem-solving?
“This point, I think, bears particular relevance to today's world of constant texting, Tiwttering, and status-updating. To withhold social communication in most project-based activities is in many cases pointless.” Will we ever by able to incorporate this social tools inside the classroom or should they be left outsides?
Tei says “Our life consists of continuous choices, and the choices bring about problems.” I like how Tei focuses on the choices rather than problem solving as those are a huge part of solving ill-designed problems.
Hanwool says “According to revised Bloom’s taxonomy (2001:
“Before we can understand a concept we have to remember it,
Before we can apply the concept we must understand it
Before we analyse it we must be able to apply it
Before we can evaluate its impact we must have analysed it
Before we can create we must have remembered, understood, applied, analysed, and evaluated”.” I think the learning can start with any skill among them or sometimes integrated skills. According to problems and choice of the individual, we should adjust our thinking skills flexibly. How can we teach students to do this?
Yu-Ting Yang says “For instance, in the first class, the teacher asks students to introduce themselves as if they were in a job interview. After listening to each other’s self-introduction, students can share what are their impressions to others. If other students’ impression is not the image the target student wishes to convey (there might be some misunderstanding in the communication), he can ask them why they think so (what he has said or what he has done that lead to this impression) and he can also think of another way (with different attitudes, tones, or wording) to present himself, which might lead to another impression. The final goal is to help students present themselves to create an impression that they desire in a job interview. The purpose of this class is to improve students’ communicative skills when they encounter misunderstanding in the conversation. I thought this was a great idea relevant to the working world!
Jasmine says “First teachers introduced related vocabulary of school life, such as semester, credit, drop, register, and dormitory. Then students surfed the websites, made some research of assigned schools, and used spreadsheets to list the characteristics under each aspect. Next each group had to figure out ten questions about each school which they would ask the representatives in the educational fair. Third, teachers guided student to learn communicative skills in American culture, such as how to greet, break the ice, change the topic, and end the conversation. Since students had to talk to the representatives who were native speakers of English, they felt the need to learn how to talk appropriately and politely. The next step was to go to the educational fair and have interview with the representatives. After the fair, students chose one of the five assigned schools and made power point to introduce it to other classmates. Finally all the students voted and decided on the best school for studying tour. This activity took several weeks and worked very well. By means of real interaction with native speakers, students in outer circle had opportunities to not only practice speaking but also applied what they had learned to real-life context, which made learning become more meaningful.”
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Chapter 5 Problem Solving
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Chapter 3: The facts of design
Out of all the tools one can use to support and enhance learning, I've come to appreciate databases and data work. It's really a love hate relationship--I hate access but I love solving the problems. This type of thinking/problem-solving/understanding and ability to manipulate data is a skill that is quickly becoming foundational in the work place but is still found in rather limited qualities--so is rather extra-ordinary. Most people do not have this interpretive skill and are not able to do this type of thinking. Arguably, this is a very hard skill to teach because it is such a subjective process. It seems that older people who do not have the same exposure to information technology as I have had, and people younger than me will have, struggle the most with this type of thinking/motivation/ability. These skills are the foundation of being able to understand statistics, as well as do meaningful research qualitative or quantitative alike.
Chapter 2
In order to be successful these days in the real world, you have to be more than a good worker. You have to be a good thinker; companies are no longer looking for people to push a button. They are looking for people who question how they push the button, why they push the button and if flicking a switch would be better and how to desing the switch to flick. They want people who have the skills to problem-solve, design solutions, maximize efficiency, and improve processes. These skills aren't standard across colleges anymore because curriculum isn't standard. (Colleges are trying to smooth this discrepancy over by creating core curriculum required for students to take in their first two years of college (making things like double and triple majors a thing of the past)) Obviously, these skills are related to a technology based world but they are also strongly connected to how we teach our students and design their learning opportunities. The true difference between being a successful student in primary school vs. in secondary school also hints at this. In college and graduate education, you have to take responsibility for your own education. Many students fail at doing this, and thus will fail to impress today's working world giants. If there were better designed learning opportunites available at a primary school level meant to incorporate some of these attributes needed to be successful, perhaps, schools would output more capable learners and workers.
Monday, June 8, 2009
Hyper text
Soothsaying
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Hyper-text
Meta-Cognition
"Students do not spontaneously engage in
metacognitive thinking unless they are explicitly
encouraged to do so through carefully designed
instructional activities (Berardi-Coletta, Buyer,
Dominowski & Rellinger, 1995; Bransford et al.,
1999; Chi, Bassok, Lewis, Reimann, & Glaser,
1989; Lin & Lehman, 1999)."
For example, it was my first time using Google sites to design a website and I can arguably say that this program wasn't entirely intuitive. Still I was able to figure out how to do many things on my own and accomplish the task at hand. As I was began to understand more about the flexibility of the design schematics, I entirely re-organized the project--thus as my knowledge grew, I thought about how I was thinking about the task and drastically altered it. While the task of designing your own website is an instructional activity to say the least, I wouldn't say that activity was carefully designed. In other words, given that Google pages no longer existed, the entire class, teacher included, had to learn to use Google sites for the first time together.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Homework 2: Task A
http://abandonedfootnotes.blogspot.com/
I looked up blogs on Classical musings that might just inspire the rest of the population who share an orientation towards modernity rather than antiquity. I found this blog, which I could immediately appreciate as he took the time to explain an ancient joke about the nuances between a featherless biped and plucked chicken.
The author of the blog is Xavier Márquez, a Lecturer in Political Theory at the Victoria University of Wellington. His research interests range from ancient political thought (especially Plato and Cicero) to more general questions about power, democracy, and expertise. His target audience is any intellectual who appreciates common interests. But the subject matter is largely political, as well as philosophical. Each post is centered upon a relevant theme, e.g. power. The purpose of this blog is to expand classical thought into modern day applications across multiple genres.
It’s simple design and surplus negative space makes this blog visually accessible. This fact is crucial in that by making his blog easy to read, he is able to put all apprehensive readers at ease about the content material. Putting his readers at ease in this way, allows the author more freedom to include anxiety inducing or intimidating content, such as including foreign language.
The ability to comment on content is extremely unique to blogging. It allows not only the opportunity for a hugely wider group to participate in a discussion, but allows for a richer discussion between users ( in way that websites and discussion forums can not). Fundamentally, there is a special singularity that exists in blogging that doesn’t exist in other technological equivalents. E.g. The purpose of a blog is a one-to-many relationship, where arguable the purpose of a discussion forum is many-to-many.
Furthermore there is an efficiency related to blogs that doesn’t exist with websites or discussion forms. As your own personal publisher, your content is distributed much more broadly than on a website. Blogs also inherently hold more personality than websites or even discussion forums, as the voice is a more personal voice, empowered by the ability to become part of what is happening now. The content of the blog is also quickly pinged all over the web and indexed to be searchable.