On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
Final Webinar Macul
1. Webinars University of Michigan MACUL 2010 Presenters: Melanie Aho, Jen Aniano, Jenny Armstrong, Bob Ause, Stella Gorlin, Kendra Munro, Liz Kolb and Jeff Stanzler
2. Why Webinars in TE? Michigan High School “online learning” experience requirement 50% of high school students will be taking online courses by 2019 Job Opportunities-49 states have virtual schools In the Cobb County (Ga.) School District, about 190 out of 6,838 teachers teach online courses during regular school days and participate in two or three faculty meetings annually—also held online—and one face-to-face meeting with administrators that focuses on district policies and procedures. 20% are stay at home moms or retirees 80% are classroom teachers that teach online in evenings/weekends Online learning students performed better on standardized tests than face to face students. 2009 SRI Study More Information on Online Learning at http://www.inacol.org/
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5. Michigan Virtual High School is Hiring!!! AP Calculus AB (EX)* AP Calculus BC (EX)* AP Chemistry (DC)* AP Psychology (CE)* Earth Space/Science (DH) Health (MA) Native American History (RX) Latin (FD) Music Appreciation (JQ) Japanese (YT) German (FB) http://www.mivu.org/AboutUs/JobsMVU/tabid/183/Default.aspx
6. Online Teachers Need Training While districts are using online teaching more and more, administrators emphasize that not all teachers are qualified to teach online. “I think there is a sense out there that if you’re a good classroom teacher you can translate that automatically into an online learning environment, and we don’t share that sense,” asserts Liz Pape, president and CEO of the nonprofit Virtual High School Global Consortium. Strong written and oral skills to communicate with their students Be motivating Have to be comfortable teaching electronically Have an interest in technology tools and using them creatively as a vehicle to teach
7. Our Assignment… Research a web2.0 site for teaching Develop a lesson Present a live 20 minute webinar on the web2.0 resource and the lesson Must engage the participants in the webinar (not a static lecture) Create a screencast of “how to” use the web2.0 resource (not in the webinar) http://screencastomatic.com
8. Why DimDim for Webinars? FREE! Up to 20 participants at one time Screensharing Audio and/or Video Interactive whiteboard Chat room Archived Set up show early, widgets, RSS, and other sharing feed options No account needed to participate
9. How to use DimDim The (second) best way to learn is to see it in action! How to schedule a meeting www.dimdim.com Feel free to join in at http://www.my.dimdim.com/melaho Key to success: Practice!
10. Pros and Cons What’s great about DimDim Ability to connect and share your desktop with users anywhere! Online office hours Chat room and interactive tools allow everyone to participate What’s not so great Technical problems can be frustrating for all
11. Examples Teaching how to use Museum Box in social studies. (BA) Teaching how to use Museum Box in science classes. (BA)
12. Your task: Create a time capsule of your autobiography for future historians using Museum Box
13. Before you begin to add artifacts to your box: From the homepage, press START Click on the SAVE link in the upper right hand corner – this will take you to the login page Click on JOIN FOR FREE Choose a username and password and in the textbox for School/Organization, type Pioneer High School Click on Pioneer High School and then click on JOIN MUSEUM BOX Title your museum box with your name and press SAVE You can now create your museum box!
14. What should my time capsule include? A photograph or image of your choosing (if you do not have any pictures on your computer, you can use the images in the photo gallery on Museum Box) A short text biography A link to a website that you think represents who you are in some way (this could be related to music, culture, literature, science, movies, etc.) A short piece of information that you think a future historian should know about our society
15. When you are ready to submit: Click on the SUBMIT button in the upper right hand corner Click on SUBMIT MY BOX Click on OK Return to the homepage and click on MUSEUM BOXES In the Choose a school drop-down menu, type Pioneer High School You should be able to see your museum box as well as those of your classmates – take a peak to see what others have done!
16. Choosing a web2.0 tool Make exploring web2.0 tools a part of your personal professional development. (Try out one a week!?) Consider the capabilities of the tool and how it might address a facet of your discipline or a component of your curriculum. Try out some of your lessons or activities using the tool. Make up a lesson for implementation and then try it yourself. (The plan for using Museum Box versus the actual use, the case of Earth Science 6.)
17. Choosing Museum Box for science classes My social studies colleagues showed me this tool. In other words, get suggestions from your colleagues! Excellent tool for organizing, grouping and categorizing information. Looks like a biologist’s or geologist’s sample box Example of Biology uses: cell types, physiological systems or taxonomy of living things. Example of Earth Science uses: classify and illustrate rock types. Double use: Students generate the “box”. Students use the completed box to study and review or in assessment.
18. Conducting a Webinar on Museum Box Make it interactive, just like good classroom teaching. Demonstrate the basics of the web2.0 tool. Provide a lesson plan that the participants can follow during the webinar and take away with them to explore on their own afterward.
19. Elements of a 30-minute webinar Orientation to the web2.0 tool – 10 minute Home page Getting signed up Basic skills Activity for participants – 15 minutes Webinar teacher is on hand to answer questions Participants do simple tasks within the tool so they can see how easy it is to get started. Polished product not necessary Conclusion Applications of tool in various courses (concrete examples) Questions and answers
20. How I prepared to lead a webinar. Preparation for this was like for a class that involved teaching a new skill or technology. Learn the tool well – Museum Box (Development of the Screencast tutorial about how to use Museum Box was very helpful here.) Develop a simple task for the participants that allowed them to experience the basic actions. (Good strategy for teaching any new technology) Tried the activity myself, and developed an example that I could demonstrate during the orientation section of the webinar.
21. What Worked Well The webinar was interactive with a few students as individuals, i.e. they were at their own computer working, not in a classroom where they could interact/distract one another. Providing the students with the webinar lesson plan in advance allowed them to plan ahead and anticipate what they would learn. It also allowed them to set up their computer and internet browser. (Students could come prepared to class!) Webinar is recorded for later viewing and review by those who participated and those who missed it.
22. What Did Not Work Well Technical difficulties arose that were frustrating. Sound would cut out on various participants. They would have to exit the webinar and return, or click a few reset buttons. In either case they missed something. One person conducting the webinar using Dimdim or another tool requires multi-tasking that takes some getting used to. Practice helps. The person conducting the webinar needs to plan ahead; no “winging it.” The teacher must invite participants, prepare the lesson and anticipate what novice users will struggle with, both conceptually and technically. Technical difficulties are like challenges in the classroom. They are frustrating and can get you off track. The advantage of webinars is that they are recorded for play back at a later point.
23. How to use webinars in K-12 Webinars allow teachers and students to interact as opposed to on-line courses that are non-interactive. In on-line courses, students receive the information and have to figure out what to do from written instruction. Interaction in on-line courses occurs via e-mail. In webinars interaction is a chat comment away and can even involve verbal communication in some sites. Virtual office hours. On-line tutorials. Reaching distance learning students.
24. Helpful Links Another Free webinar option http://www.wiziq.com/ How to Use DimDim tutorial http://tiny.cc/dimdim686