Showing posts with label lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lists. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Interactive Formative Tools

research-scholars-students

Today’s classroom is filled with instant access to your student’s thinking.  Formative assessments are way to gain insight into the thinking, understanding, and desires of your students.  Correctly used formative assessments can help teachers adjust and create effective and engaging classrooms, where every student in the classroom has a voice and the lesson is geared for them as an individual.  With students having access to personal devices like iPads, smartphones, Android tablets, Chromebooks, laptops, etc., a teacher can quickly and easily tap into their student’s thinking by completing a formative assessment.  I have listed out some of my favorite formative assessment tools below.  Some I have used more than others, but all are worth checking out to see which fits your class best.  Not one tool will fit every situation, so feel adapt and adjust which one you use.  



Online Quizzing and Games


Create a quiz with multiple choice, true/false, or short answer questions.  These are then found in your dedicated classroom.  Quizzes can be student paced or teacher paced, where student quizzes can also provide immediate feedback or not.  There is also a “Space Race” game to have students to compete in a group.  A Quick Quiz option is also available if you have a question already made within a presentation, on the board, or given orally.  Finally, there is an Excel template to import quizzes made in a spreadsheet, or just find a quiz in the Socrative Garden community.  Socrative has been a staple in the edtech world for many years, and still one of my favorites.   

Kahoot came on to the scene with a bang, and quickly showed what including games into the classroom could do to the classroom culture and student engagement.  Build or find a Public quiz.  Start the quiz and student join in at kahoot.it.  Answer choices appear as color and shape options, and the question is projected on the classroom wall.  The simplicity, kitschy sounds and themes, and the leaderboards make this a favorite for most students.  Embed a YouTube video for the lobby that reviews the topic in a song is an added bonus for review.  I like to take my Kahoots a question at a time, and truly look at the results and give immediate redirective, constructive teaching based on misconceptions/misunderstandings that become very apparent.  Another way to use Kahoot in the classroom, is to allow the students to build the quizzes.  Then play them as a class. Kahoot is currently working on a mobile version of the quiz builder, stay tuned for more details.  

Like Kahoot, this site offers game based review of topics and leaderboards.  Unlike Kahoot the questions are on the student’s devices and student paced.  An added bonus of correct and incorrect memes makes this quiz game more enjoyable for some students.  They also recently come out with a homework option, where quizzes could be started and slated as homework.  So you could use this instead of worksheet home.  Students will then know there leader status as the class complete the homework.  

Yes, another interactive quiz game site.  This one stands out to me though in its focus on the data that is being received.  Quizalize does a great job of finding the weaknesses in your student’s understandings.  Also the leaderboard is really engaging with constant updating and action.  Finally a fun feature of Quizalize is the team competition addition.  The leaderboard is split into two columns and each team member’s addition to their team’s progress.  

Have a limit on the number of devices your student’s have?  Try Plickers if all you have is your personal smartphone or One iPad Classroom.  Print out individual cards, ask a question, have the students hold up the card based on the correct answer, then scan the room with your device’s camera.  Each card has four answer choices depending on the direction of the card.  The app will see each of these answers, then collect and code the results.  Print out the cards and have students glue them into their notebooks for easy access and storage.  This is a great option if your hang up on using tech in the classroom is because you don’t have a lot of access.

One of my favorite data collection tools is GoFormative.  Favorite because there is so much that you can do with this.  Take your standard practice problems, questions, and worksheets and make them interactive on the student’s device.  GoFormative allows for students to answer question by typing, selecting, inserting an image, or drawing their answer.  This opens up the type and subject matter of the questions to a whole new level.  

The hidden gem of the Google Apps Suite is Google Forms.  Create a simple form of text, multiple choice, checkboxes, scale, or grid style questions.  The results are collected into a Google Sheet for analysis and manipulation.  Try including videos or images into your assessment and reach different learner types.  Use a branching structure and the go-to page option to provide a unique experience to every user.  Extend the use of Google Forms by using Add-Ons like Form Ranger and Form Limiter, and extend the ability of your results, in sheets, by using Add-Ons like CopyDown or Autocrat.  The favorite though, among teachers, is Flubaroo.  With this Add-On, in Sheets, you set up a form, create the answer key, then Flubaroo will grade, calculate scores, and email the results auto-magically.  Check out the links for more examples and explanations.  



Interactive Presenations


This is more than just formative assessment tool, it could transform completely the way you give direct or indirect instruction to your students.  Upload your Powerpoint or use the Chrome Extension to “nearpodize” your Google Slides presentations. Then add built in multiple choice questions, free response questions, or draw responses.  Once your Nearpod lesson is published students login to a class, and follow along on their devices.  Student’s slides will progress with you, and will be able to answer the questions individually when embedded into the Nearpod.  If you want the students to go to a specific site, send them the link during the presentation, this is also a way to get them to a YouTube video if you are not a premium subscriber.  Results are viewable instantaneously, and can be shared out to the rest of the class to point out great examples.  

Another site to change the entire way that you deliver content students is Classflow.  Originally built to extend and connect Promethean Board users to their students, Classflow now will allow connections even if you do not have the Promethean board software.  Either using classflow.com or the Classflow desktop applications, student login into a class.  Teachers deliver content on their projected computer, and when necessary they can send the image of the content to their students.  Also, you can instantly create poll questions to see the understanding of your class.  Questions may be multiple choice, free response, likert scale, true/false, “wordseed”, or creative/draw based.  I find the Classflow delivery and processing of lessons to be a little clunky and outdated.  But if you are looking for a way to get more students engage and use their devices in an interactive way this could be an option.

An OER and localized place for learning, Gooru provides access to multimedia rich learning experience.   Teachers can create collections, based on state and national standards, from resources in the community or upload their own resources.  They are then able to assign these collections to students as a learning journey.  Teachers are able to track student progress and provide feedback when needed.  This is a “newer” site, as I have noticed they are planning on introducing TEKS soon, but the resources are ample.





SMS/Web Based Polls


Immediate understanding of the audience’s comprehension of the topic at hand is the benefit of polling, and Polleverywhere excels at this.  Create a multiple choice, free response, Q&A/Brainstorm or clickable image poll, then project the instructions to vote on a screen.  Students can use SMS or web browser to submit their choice.  The results are then tabulated and easily visualized as either a table, graph or word stream or cloud.  These results can also be integrated into your PowerPoint or Google Slides.  I liked using Poleverywhere before tests to see what final questions my students might have.  This allowed the questions to be field in an organized manner and give a voice to the quieter students.  

Polling with Mentimeter is simple.  Type your question, set up the look, then send out to your audience.  Voting can be done via SMS or web browser.  What sticks out is Mentimeter’s matrix options.  Most are paid for option, but a the free Arthur D. Little matrix can help you see how aligned your classroom is with the objectives of the day.  Other options include the free text, scale, and multiple choice answers.  Finaly once results have been collected, these can be embedded onto your website.  This could be an option for getting class understanding of the day’s objective or direction of the next assignment.  

Simple and efficient is the benefit of SMS Poll.net.  Like other poll sites, voting can be done via SMS or web browser.  The polls built here are much quicker to build and dynamic.  Also, unlike other sites, the number of votes allowed updates per month.  On the free version 300 votes are collected per month.  Results can be shown on PowerPoint, online, or embedded onto your website.  



Social Media


Social Media - Twitter, Pintrest, Google Plus
Your students are on social media, and they cannot live without social media.  So why not use social media in the classroom?  Since the advent of the “hashtag”(#) social media has become a search and specific interactivity.  Develop a hashtag, ask a question using that hashtag, have your students post on your selected social media type with the hashtag, then see the results.  Two words of caution on this.  1) Check out the hashtag on social media before claiming it.  It may lead to results that were not expected and 2) Set expectations for proper digital citizenship are established.  This may be something you would want to practice on a shared Google Doc, before trying on the interwebs.  To curate the search and results, try Twitter Curator on Google Docs as an Add-On.  The use of social media in your classroom can be a powerful tool.  If you can get your students to use this appropriately, you are meeting and engaging them where they are already engaged.  

Reading the Technocation blog, by Michael Fricano II, I found this gem.  Cards on YouTube video came out about year or two ago.  With cards YouTubers can direct their viewers to further information, interesting websites, or collect polls.  Michael shares how to use cards in your classroom.  By incorporating cards during a video, a specific spot, students can interact with the video by answer questions or being directed to different resources.  Here is an example of how this video might look like with cards.  Use this as a station in your class, or maybe as a flipped classroom assignment.  The best part about cards, unlike YouTube Annotations, is that cards are accessible by mobile devices.  

Like I said before, not one tool “will rule them all”.  Try them out, see which ones your student’s like the best.  Many times novelty can be your best friend.  Pull out a new tool every so often, and keep others for only certain occasions.  This will keep your students engage and actively participating.  No matter which one you use, the important part is what you do with the data you collect.

There are many, many more types of formative assessment tools.  These are just some of them.  Which are your favorites?  Which ones did I forget to mention?  


*All images are from the companies mentioned in the post.



Monday, February 15, 2016

#EdTech Helping with Differentiation

Years ago if a teacher had a student that needed extra help with reading, keeping organized, or might need to see the instructions in a different format it was a real struggle to open up all of these options.  Today though, technology is here here to help and alleviate a lot of this extra work, and bring the tools to students to help them achieve success.  

Google Forms and Google Slides - Go to page option
Google has always been about collaboration and creativity, so it is no wonder that they have ways to support student learning.  By using either the “Go to question based on answer choice” in Google Forms or hyperlinking slides in Google Slides, teachers can create lessons that the student guides their learning.  Google Slides can be linked within the presentation to make a “Choose Your Own Adventure” learning setup.  When a student comes to a slide that he/she needs more support on a help link could be available to take a student to another slide that can assist them with the content.  This assistance could be a reading passage highlighted, a video, a graphic, or any other number of options.  This concept is also done in YouTube based on annotations.  Here is an example of how that would look.  


With a series of linked videos and annotations over the video, the students were able to cover a large topic, but in an engaging and differentiated way.  

With Google Forms, the same can be done but with the “Go to question based on answer choice” option on any question that is Multiple Choice, Choose from a List, or Checkboxes.  This is again a way to support student learning with graphics, video, and annotated reading selection.  Here is a video I made to explain how to do this.





Student Choice - Allow students to show understanding in multiple ways
Just like giving small children the option between multiple vegetables to eat, giving students a choice will make more success in them wanting to show their learning.  

Wheel Decide is new tool I just stumbled upon.  This site allows you to create your own spin wheel for students to choose tools, topics, or questions.  It can be set up to eliminate choices once it is landed on, which would be useful when assigning topics.  It is also embeddable, to be able to put to you class site as a staple to encourage a starting off point when trying to start a writing assignment.  Here is an example of that.


Have students show learning by completing a Bingo card or Learning Menu.  Kasey Bell of shakeuplearning.com brought me to this option of differentiation.  Here is here post about Bingo Cards.  Basically, create a series of tasks that a student must complete to show understanding of the topic.  On the Bingo board the student must complete a BINGO to finalize the assignment.  When using a learning menu the student will choose from a series of tasks.  Each task is worth a certain amount of points.  The students can then complete the task, and gain the grade based on the task completed.  Here is an example of this.  





Separate Groups in your Learning Management System - distribute work based on student grouping
Most Learning Management System (eBackpack, Google Classroom, Schoology, etc.) gives teachers a way to set up different groups within an already setup group.  The assignments or notes can then be distributed to multiple different groups, but not singling out a specific group. Create these group based on previous limits like ESL, Dyslexia, etc. or by a previous or pre-assessment done in class.  This could be a way to do small group instructions all at one time.




Record and Share Classes - students access this content later for learning at own pace
Recording you lessons are good way to get your students additional support.  If a student learns at a different pace, or is absent that day in class can access these recordings later.  These students can then pause, rewind, and slow down the instruction for deeper learning.  A couple tools to try out with this are:

Google Hangouts on Air - Create a Google Hangout and link on your learning management system.  Then start the hangout during the lesson time.  This hangout will then be recorded and saved on YouTube.  Add this and any of the handouts to your website.

Doceri on iPad - Using the free app and Doceri desktop to record annotation and desktop.  This can then be uploaded and movie to a sharing site.  I would do this for every class, then upload to YouTube at the end of the period.  By the end of the day, the video, assignments and handouts were posted to the Google Classroom.

Swivl - Handy little robot will follow you around and record your class.  This can then be housed on the Swivl servers, or can be downloaded.  Don’t have money for the robot, many times they will be happy to let you try it out for free first!




Lexile Level of Reading - change the reading level of what you student is reading
Making the reading attainable by all students, allows for all students to access the learning.  A few examples of where to help you with this.

Lexile Analyzer - use this site to determine what the reading level is that you are assigning.  Knowing the lexile level helps know if the material is accessible.

Newsela - The site curates news articles, aligns them to learning standards, and even can set-up quizzes and assignments.  My English teachers shared this great resources with me, and it just amazing.  It will also take a reading level and adjusted as needed by the student’s reading level.

TLDR - Too Long Didn’t Read is a Chrome extension.  It doesn’t lower the reading level, but it does summarize and shorten the reading.  If you want your students to gain the content, and they refuse to read long passage this just might help.  

Learning Ally - Students with visual and reading difficulties will enjoy this app and website.  Text is available in audio format, and easily accessible.  As an added bonus, and Texas student with these disabilities can access Learning Ally for free.

Rewordify - Lower a reading level of any text or webpage with this web tool.  After pasting in the text or website, Rewordify will rewrite the article.  Article will then be highlighted and accessible with extra support built in.  Words are clickable for definitions, synonyms and audio components.  Also vocabulary list, quizzes, and other assessment tools can be accessed based on these sites.  Here is a short screencast about this site.





Differentiation is make content accessible to all students.  By using technology and address your student’s needs, all students can learn.  I hope some of these are useful to you.  Are there any that I did not mention that you favor?  Put them in the comments below.

Saturday, January 23, 2016

iPad Apps at Elgin High School


By pr_ip Primus Inter Pares [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

There are over 200,000 educational apps in the Apple Apps Store, and nearly 2 million apps altogether. At Elgin High School, the students and teachers do not as many to choose from, but there are a good amount to help in learning and showing their learning. The following is a presentation I made to run down some of my favorite apps in Self Service (JAMF Software version of regulated app store).  Hopefully this list will help you in planning and experimenting with apps and the iPad. No matter what app you choose, remember always start with two questions:

1.What is it that you want your students to learn? ie. TEK, Common Core Standard, NGSS, etc.


2.How do you want your students to show their learning? This could be vague or very specific, but the more choice the more ownership of the learning.





What some other apps you would include on this list?  Of the apps listed, how else do you use them?

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Besides Worksheets for the iPads

Many times when teachers are trying to include more technology into their classroom, they will substitute what they know with a technology device.  This is know as Substitution, within the SAMR model of tech integration.  There is nothing wrong with staying at this level, but Substitution is the same as asking Knowledge based questions from Bloom’s.  Just as we expect our students to comprehend at a higher level, we should model that higher level.  Here are my suggestions to raise that level and produce higher order thinking from your students.

Knowledge Retention and Recall

Quizlet - using this webpage as a base tool create vocabulary list with term definitions, and images for students to study. Then let them use their iPad apps to study using the multiple versions of study tools.  The study tools give full access to multiple parts of their thinking including basic flash card review, spelling, and game-based review. Then let students complete on the own the matching game section to see who could get the fastest time. Let them submit these times as the actual grade. Give them a set standard that they have to be to get a base grade and then break down the times the coordinate with other letter grades. This will help drive students engagement by allowing them to decide how high they want to raise their grades by by only playing a game.

Padlet - Gather questions that are higher order thinking from a worksheet that you would have given them, and let them submit their answers on a Padlet board. Then I have the boards that can then be saved as a PDF and share on a class website.  It be a good review activity for those that were gone or it just need time to look back on it. Padlet is device agnostic so that even if it's not on iPad, it could be access on any web browser. Also you can use tablet as a brainstorming tool. Use it as a categorization tool, or a way to get students talk together to where they can share and collaborate on how best to answer a question.

Word clouds - Have students create a word cloud of the vocabulary terms that are important to the lesson. Then have students write out an explanation of the Word Cloud created.  The ABCya Cloud Generator is a pretty solid free app on the iPad for word clouds. The word cloud can then be saved and shared on with the teacher or attached as an image to the explanation below.

Quizzes and Assessments

Google Forms - I could include this tool in any of these locations, where I found a lot of useless was by making quick quizzes for assessments. Using a multitude of different question types you can make individualized assessments every student in your class by using the “Goto Page Based On Answer Choice” option. Also you can use Add Ons like Super Quiz or Flubaroo to automate grading, and return to the students the email for further review.

Kahoot, Quizizz, or Quizzle - All of these are tools that can be used as a game based quiz for your students. All the tools are able to convert the results into a spreadsheet that spreadsheet can then be used as a way to track progress. I made my students use their real names when sign in to these programs as an easy way to track their progress. To lower the fear of failure I would give them the base score, and then give them additional points based on correct responses. The correct responses added to a total score to a passing grade but just participating will give him at least a 50.

QR Code Scavenger Hunt - Who says quizzes have to be when the students sit still and answer questions? Create a QR scavenger hunt by placing multiple choice question around the room. Each ABC or D answer has a specified QR code. The correct QR code will take the student to the next question on the scavenger hunt. This is a great way to get your students up and active. My students always seemed to respond better to answer a whole list of questions if they were up moving around, instead of being stationary on a worksheet. Here’s an example of one I made for steps of mitosis.

Those are just some ways that you can use mobile devices in your classroom. I find the easiest way to change what you used to do, to what you can do is add motion and activity into your plans. What are some ways you use mobile devices in your classroom? How do students respond?

Monday, October 12, 2015

Advice Your Dad Would Give on Education

My dad was always one to give out vague, but strong advice.  He was the one that told me “Look them in the eyes and speak with conviction; they will never doubt you.”  I use this many times in class.  By the end of the year, student’s would never know if my stories were the truth or just a story to make a point.  I have been thinking about this and how common advice can translate to education very easily.  See if you agree with me.


Thinking... please wait

Photo Credit: Thinking ... please wait by Karola Riegler


“Fake it till you make it” - #KidsDeserveIt


A few weeks ago, a blog post was put out at KidsDeserveIt.com about the power of being positive.  I am an avid follower of this blog, and as such shared with the my Twitter followers this post.  I retweeted the original share, adding my own two cents of “Fake it till you make it, stay positive”.  It was a real eye opener for me.  I know I forget this sometimes.  Kids are here to learn, not to deal with your own personal issues.  I know many days I have had a rough night and morning because of my own kids are sick, or just don’t want to get their hair done or their shoes on.  This is not your student’s fault, and they shouldn’t be privy of it.  Dave Burgess’s writes in Teach Like A Pirate when speaking of enthusiasm, “Even if you are only acting at first, an amazing thing happens along the way.  You actually start to really feel and become enthusiastic.”  I think this can be transferred into being positive.  If you are having a rough day, try to see the positive.  Find the small positives, even if it is you got a little extra bacon in your salad.  Take those small wins, and you will start seeing larger ones.  If you can’t find any small ones, then find the positive teacher and hang with them.  Get them to work on a project with you, and then you both win.  It is not your student’s responsibility to make you positive, but it is your responsibility to not let them know you are not.


“Life if what happens, when you are busy making plans” - John Lennon


I don’t know if I cited this to right original speaker, but John Lennon was singing this when I was thinking about this blog post.  I was watching Mr. Holland’s Opus, he was struggling with the death of John Lennon, his relationship with his son, and his teaching career.  I think this idea can expand to our lessons.  Many times it is worth stop focusing on the objective of that day and let your student’s interests lead the discussion.   My students knew they could this, and these were some of the most engaging conversations and lessons that were ever in my class.  Student’s want to learn, if it something they want to learn.  Let them lead the direction of the discussion.  If the discussion is close to on topic, let them lead it.  Many times it seems like this is not possible with district and state tests bearing down on you.  But if you truly listen to what they are asking and saying it will relate.  If it doesn’t, then make a Google Board.  Put up a bulletin board, with abstract questions and let students find the answer.  Require that they supply their citations and rationale behind their finding.  Develop a sense of inquiry and discovery in your classroom, and there will be more learning.  


“Relationships are the air they breathe” - Dr. Mack Brown


Teaching the African American Male by Dr. Mack Brown, was probably one of the best professional developments about classroom management I have been to.  It was obviously about teaching these men, but it developed to more than that.  After leaving this I made a commitment to use this one piece of advice to develop my classroom.  A classroom is a team, it is a living organism, it will live or die based on one student.  Many times I refer to a student that is not following expectations or procedures as a "virus".  If they continually do not do what is expected, this behavior will spread to the entire class.  Unlike human viruses, this "virus" can be shut down.  Purposefully developing relationship, finding what and how this student ticks, will bring you a great distance with eradicating the "virus".  If a student feels that you care about them, the will work work for you if they won’t work for themselves.  Let them know that you are the one thing in their life that is stable, the one thing that will be there when you tell them that you will be.  Understand first, then try to help.  If you don’t feel like you can help them, just being an adult that acts like an adult will be a great start.  You can probably agree with me, that it is the student’s that you had to work the hardest to love, is the one will always say hello in the hallway in their own unique way.  As it has been said many times before “Students do not care what you know, until they know you care.”


“Don’t Let the Tail Wag the Dog” - John Sursa


John Sursa was former Physics teacher colleague of mine.  He knew his physics, and he knew his kids.  One day after school we were having our non-scheduled PLCs, and he made this comment. I forgot what he was speaking about, but the point was made.  Many times I can be so focused on getting the objective done, or find the perfect tech tool to use for a lesson.  I would scrounge around Youtube looking for the best video, find the best online simulator, and search through shelves of physics supplies to teach acceleration due to gravity.  After all these examples and videos, simply grabbing a textbook and a piece of paper and having them both land at the same time recorded on an iPad is all that is necessary.  Tech is a tool, not the objective.  If a technology needs to be removed to make it less complicated, then do it.  Do not forget though, that tech can open many doors that used to be shut.  If you are so focused on what you have done the past 10 years of teaching, and not what you want the students to learn then it is time to adjust your plans.


Do any of these ring a bell to you?  What advice would you give?  Any of the ones I listed that you disagree with?  Let me know.