Showing posts with label Explain Everything. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Explain Everything. Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2017

40+ Elementary iPad Integration Examples


We just finished the second year of 1:1 iPads with our fifth grade students. We began our 
1:1 program six years ago at our high school and expanded it gradually to include all students in grades 5-12. We have instructional technology support teachers for elementary, middle, and high school who are key to providing our teachers with training and support and making our program a success. The staff in these positions sometimes return to full time teaching or move into different roles and we have new teacher-leaders begin working in this role.

Our elementary coach will be new next year, so as a way to help this new coach become familiar with what has been happening in fifth grade classrooms with iPads, our current tech coach, Andrea Hoffmann, had each teacher made a page in an eBook this spring about a favorite iPad use, lesson, or goal achieved (PDF version). All of these pages were compiled and shared among all the teachers and then given to the new instructional technology coach. The book contains all sorts of ideas for using iPads for instruction and learning, from formative assessment to green screening, Book Creator to Explain Everything. It offers a great snapshot into fifth grade classrooms at all six of our elementary schools. 

You can learn more about our 1:1 program, iPads, and use of technology for learning in the related posts below:

Monday, March 27, 2017

Authentic Language Learning Through Tech Tutorial Screencasts

Recently at Minnetonka Middle School West, teachers Stephanie Battista and Melissa DuBose had their seventh grade Spanish Immersion students make instructional technology tutorial screencasts. They purposely had the students make these videos to give them an authentic task to practice using specific instructional and technical vocabulary, in this case “mandatos” aka command verbs. This language practice was not something that would have been as meaningful or memorably practiced in a simple classroom discussion.

Student sample template
The students worked in small groups with two to four classmates and chose an app for their project, such as Pic Collage or Popplet. They then collaborated and created their plan and script in a shared Google Doc using a template (pictured) for their instructional screencast which was to last a couple minutes. They made a shared Google Slide show with screenshots and instructions to use in their Explain Everything video. Melissa and Stephanie are hoping that final screencasts will be used with our elementary Spanish immersion students as part of a tutorial library in the future so these younger students can learn how to use these apps as well as learn the language in an authentic situation, hearing older students as the teachers. 

Here is a student example (shown above). The basic summary of the project requirements are below:
  • Must include an introduction to the app: What is it?  Why is it useful? What are the benefits?  
  • Must include at least ten steps explaining how to use the apps. Instructions should be detailed and easy to follow for a new user.  Underline these words in the script!
  • Must include “mandatos” (the command form of Spanish).  Highlight these words in the script!
  • Must include at least five screenshots and an image of the app icon to help users follow along
  • All group members must contribute!  All group members must speak at some point during the tutorial.
  • Final product should be 2-5 minutes long.

When I asked Stephanie to reflect on the project and its outcomes, she said the following: 
I love this project because Google Docs gives students the freedom to collaborate and work together simultaneously on the same document. It does take students a while to get used to sharing and exporting Google Docs, but we have worked hard to get our students accustomed to the app, so much so that some students chose to present Google Docs in their App Tutorial.  The major benefit of this app is that when students are absent or need to work at home, they can easily do so using a Google doc.   
Additionally, using Explain Everything gives me the opportunity to hear my students use their presentational communication, which is an important skill that we are trying to improve.  Many of our students can speak “conversational” Spanish proficiently, but struggle to speak in a presentational manner for an extended period of time.  This project gives the students the opportunity to plan and practice those skills.  We look forward to the future and hope to pass on these videos to our elementary counterparts as an authentic resource!
Furthermore, Melissa adds:
I agree with Stephanie, that this is an opportunity  for a truly authentic experience and will create a great way to share with our elementary schools. I think the students enjoy the project and love picking out which app they would like to make a tutorial for. They struggle to find the vocabulary they need without using English but this a great opportunity for them to apply the vocabulary specific to a context they might not feel comfortable in. 
This is a great example of student collaboration, communication, and learning in an authentic and real world situation harnessing the power of technology in our 1:1 iPad program. It covers multiple dimensions of the Minnetonka Teaching & Learning Framework.

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Monday, November 14, 2016

Math: An Overlooked Subject in Non-Tablet 1:1 Programs

Education is changing and the way students learn math will never be the same. Technology in the classroom like the iPad allows students to organize and share their work faster than ever before. In Mr. Best’s Calculus class, these tools accelerate an already accelerated class. Students use Notability, Explain Everything and Desmos to explore topics in a deeper, more meaningful way.
Unfortunately math is often an overlooked subject area in most traditional non-tablet 1:1 programs. Yet starting in kindergarten, every student through their senior year of high school spends a good portion of their day in math class. Students can't do much of their work in math classes with technology when they are limited to a traditional keyboard and screen.
In most traditional 1:1 Chromebook or laptop programs I've seen, students have their devices closed during math class and use paper and pencil, because math requires handwriting. (For that matter, a lot of school subjects require handwriting.) Sure, you could type up all numbers and variables in the lines of your equations, change fonts to superscript for each exponent, figure out the special keystrokes for math symbols to insert, and come up with other workarounds,  but have you ever seen anyone take the time to do that?! It would be so cumbersome. And if you think writing in digital ink on a laptop is comparable, you likely haven’t tried for an extended period of time. Occasionally while touring traditional 1:1 programs with keyboards, I’ve seen math students who are using their device as an expensive calculator or have opened up an online textbook. Some teachers in these situations do try to harness the limited technology available for math by incorporating video instruction, YouTube tutorials, Kahn Academy content, and assessment tools.  
Because of the limitations of the device, students in traditional 1:1 programs are limited to consuming content in math rather than interacting and creating it. There is so much power in handwritten notes, sketches, and annotations. The availability and power of digital ink sets 1:1 tablet implementations on a level above that of traditional devices. Since so much of school is handwriting, the ability to use digital ink for note taking and math homework allows students to harness the power of technology for all aspects of their learning. Not only can they access content for learning, they can create it.

In Minnetonka math classrooms, students using Notability write in digital ink, which allows them to write, resize, relocate, change colors, copy, paste, manipulate, pinch, zoom, drag, interact and more with their own handwritten equations and notes. Research has shown that typed up notes aren’t as memorable or helpful and can even be detrimental to learning. The ability to create handwritten notes and so much more on a tablet should be a key factor for consideration not only in math but all subject areas. Math class can be paperless with 1:1 tablets. Tablets allow students to not only create handwritten notes with technology, but redefine what traditional note taking even is compared with paper and pencil in a traditional classroom or traditional keyboard 1:1 environment.
In addition to digital note taking and annotations, students frequently use the camera for both photos and videos which are added to their notes. They quickly snap a picture of the teacher’s example, embed it right within their notes, and then add their own writing and annotations on top of that image. Students in our math classes use Explain Everything to record screencasts to describe their thinking and processing. They can share these videos with one another to teach and reinforce concepts to classmates and provide their teachers with a deeper understanding of what they have learned. Further, visualization and manipulation of objects and graphs are routine in math classes thanks to the power of 1:1 tablets, enhancing students’ understanding of concepts. In the iPads in High School Calculus video, you can see Minnetonka students doing all of these things, including using Desmos for exploring patterns in graphs.

I have written in the past about the need to consider the overall ROI, return on investment, of a device for the life of the device. In the long run, we have found that an iPad provides a bigger bang for the buck than a laptop or Chromebook ($0.38/day). In conversations about device choice, it’s important to reflect on the value you place on all subjects. Consider if and how students could even use the tool you have in mind in subjects like math, art, music, physical education, science, world language, and more. Too often educators and decision makers forget to think this through and elevate the value of a traditional keyboarding device over the value of a tool that can be truly used to enhance learning across all subject areas.

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Monday, April 11, 2016

Students Learn to Visualize a Process: A Valuable Life Skill for Everyone

Catherine M.'s Visualization 
Recently senior students in a Minnetonka High School Composition for College Hybrid Course visualized their writing process. Teacher Charley Barniskis had students reflect on their own writing process and talk about how everyone's writing process is different. He also explained that after high school, students will have to work through this process on their own. Whether in college or the workplace, they will be given writing tasks and have to complete them by a due date.
Tom Wujec's TED Talk
Charley had the students begin by watching Tom Wujec's TED Talk about making toast. If you haven't seen it, make time for it and reflect on how you illustrate a process through drawing, what makes for the ideal number of steps or "nodes", and the benefits of models worked out by a group-think synthesis. Think of creating a vision statement, or illustrating a change or project. You can learn more on Wujec's website, too. As Tom explains, pretty much every problem area and/or challenge in life and work can be represented and worked through by breaking it into steps, reflecting on what is most important, and acting on it to completion.

Allison M.'s Visualization
After watching the TED Talk, Charley’s students were to imagine that they were asked to write something by a boss, religious leader, coach, etc. and think about how they would normally complete it. They thought through how they normally brainstormed ideas, worked through drafts, proofread their work, and even where procrastination fit into their personal style. Students created drawings of their writing process, some using the Explain Everything app, others Notability, some used paper or index cards. They then posted their images to a discussion board with an explanation in Schoology. The discussion board allowed them to view other classmates' work and interact with one another through comments. Charley prompted his students to reflect on what they learned about one another's writing processes and explain what they found surprising. You can view the entire assignment here.

Technology was used to augment the lesson and it was an option that students could use to illustrate and represent their process. They also used technology to share their work and communicate with one another through Schoology. One of the great things about this project is that by taking his students through this exercise, Charley not only had them reflect on their own writing process, but see one another's thinking. They were able to see differences from themselves and realize that multiple methods exist for tackling and completing a project. Charley explained to me that "this assignment also compelled some students to change how they write because they were exposed to so many other ways to do it. They were taken out of their isolated practice and shown other ways to go about writing. It also fostered a conversation about procrastination: the Death Star of the writing process, which NO college composition textbook discusses when it discusses the writing process." Plus the ability to visualize and represent solutions to problems is a valuable life skill that these students will use a lot in their future, well beyond reflecting on their personal writing process. 

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Monday, January 4, 2016

Minnetonka Elementary School Fifth Graders Bring Home iPads

iPad Parent Showcase 2 min. video
Thanks Andrea Hoffmann for some of the video and
Jake @Capture Video for the editing!
Back in September when school began, fifth graders in Minnetonka Schools were each given their own iPad for the first time as part of our 1:1 program for 6,250 grade 5-12 students. Over the past four months, these fifth grade students and their teachers have been integrating their iPads into their learning, using it as a tool to enhance instruction. They quickly mastered the apps and use their iPads to create projects, show others what they know, as well as document their learning (see past posts on Book Creators in Minnetonka Schools and Students Explain Everything and Increase Test Scores). Prior to the start of school, fifth grade teachers spent a half day in training. They also have had additional staff development this fall when they met with colleagues and teacher instructional technology coaches for three hours about the implementation of a 1:1 device for learning. They will have two more staff development meetings yet this school year to continue this learning.


Grade 5 students show their parents how they use iPads
Not long after students received their iPads, questions began about when the students could start bringing them home. Teachers, students, and parents wanted to be able to continue and extend learning with the iPad. (Grade 6-12 secondary students in our 1:1 program bring their iPads home daily, but our fifth grade students began the year keeping their devices at school. Students in pre-K through grade four have access to iPads on carts to use during the school day, but not a dedicated 1:1 device.) So after meeting with staff at one of the elementary schools eager and ready to have students bring iPads home, we decided to have an iPad Parent Showcase (Watch a 2 minute video overview) to show parents how their children were using their iPads in school and the types of things that kids would do with an iPad once they brought it home. A date was set and invitations were emailed home from the classroom teachers.


Tic-Tac-Toe Activity Sheet
A few weeks later, both Deephaven and Groveland Elementary Schools held their iPad Parent Showcases. Parents were invited to school for an hour to see things firsthand. They sat with their child in her/his classroom and saw how iPads were being used. Fifth grade teacher Karl Boberg created an iPad Tic-Tac-Toe activity (pictured) which students downloaded from Schoology and opened in Notability. They used digital ink to cross off each square as they completed it while their parents watched and learned how they used the iPad in school. Activities included showing their parents Book Creator, Explain Everything, Notability, Schoology, eBooks, math activities, and more. After visiting the classrooms, parents met with the principal and media specialist in the media center to hear more about the take home program, get tips for management of the device at home, and ask questions. All of our 1:1 iPads are filtered on and off campus. We offer optional insurance for families that covers accidental damage.

Starting on December 21, fifth grade students at Groveland Elementary began bringing their iPads home. Today, fifth graders at both Deephaven and Scenic Heights Elementary Schools bring their iPads home. Minnewashta Elementary School has scheduled its iPad Parent Showcase for February 5, and students at the other two elementary schools are selecting dates. We purposely wanted to let this decision and timeframe be set by each school as they are ready to do so. Over the past four years, the iPad has proven to be an invaluable tool to enhance learning in our 1:1 program in grades 6-12. It will be exciting to see this same growth as grade five students take home their device.

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Monday, December 21, 2015

Minnetonka Top 100+ Ideas for 1:1 Integration in 5th grade, English, Math, Science, Social Studies, and World Language

Last week twelve Minnetonka staff shared their best practices, favorite ideas, and tips for 1:1 integration in their curricular areas at the annual TIES Technology Conference in Minneapolis. Presentations were entitled TonkaX Teacher Talks, 1:1 Science- Unleash the Possibilities, and Engaging Learners Through Reflection & Discussion. Each teacher showcased some of their best ideas for integrating technology in their 1:1 classrooms in 5th grade, social studies, science, English, Spanish, and math. There are so many great ideas, most of which are device agnostic. 

TonkaX Teacher Talks: 25+ Best iPad Ideas
This breakout session will feature five Minnetonka 1:1 iPad teachers for 10 minutes each showcasing their five+ best ideas and tips for iPad integration in their curricular area. Meet a 5th grade elementary teacher, a secondary math teacher, a high school English teacher, a middle school social studies teacher, and a secondary elective teacher. Come see the great things happening in their classrooms with iPads and push your level of technology integration to a higher level to deepen students’ learning!


 
1:1 Science: Unleash the Possibilities
Come and hear about the variety of ways iPads have transformed secondary science classrooms in Minnetonka. You will hear examples from areas of physical science, life science, Earth science, physics, as well as accelerated courses and AP. Leave this session with simple and elaborate ways to integrate iPads in meaningful ways. See how technology integration can transform science education by making the student learning experience more personalized, creation driven, and relevant for today’s learners.

Engaging Learners Through Reflection & Discussion
Come and hear about the variety of ways iPads have transformed secondary science classrooms in Minnetonka. You will hear examples from areas of physical science, life science, Earth science, physics, as well as accelerated courses and AP. Leave this session with simple and elaborate ways to integrate iPads in meaningful ways. See how technology integration can transform science education by making the student learning experience more personalized, creation driven, and relevant for today’s learners.


Two other groups of staff from Minnetonka presented at TIES last week on Implementation of a K-12 Computer Science Program and Crowd-Based Innovation: The Future Is Here

In addition to these ideas shared at the TIES conference last week, check out the Top 25 ideas shared at the ETT Conference in San Diego in February by another group of Minnetonka 1:1 teachers. More info about our 1:1 iPad Program can be found here.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Students Explain Everything and Increase Test Scores

Each year fifth graders in Minnetonka Schools study the science of catapults as one of their units. Excelsior Elementary teacher Jennifer Kitt explained to me recently that the assessment for this unit is typically a more difficult test for many of her students. She explained that in the past, students have not had as high of scores on their final test compared to their scores on other science units. So she was eager to try something new.
Image Source: Explain Everything

This year with iPads in our 1:1 Program, all fifth grade students now have access to the app Explain Everything. Jennifer had her students use this tool to document their learning and explain what they had learned about catapults. She said that her goal was to have her class use a higher level of Bloom's taxonomy, and knew that Explain Everything would be a great way to do it. 


When I was in her classroom, students showed me their products. Emma gave me permission to share her product and you can see it in this video. She combined photos, text, and handwriting in her explanation about catapults.
 


As a result of this project, Jennifer was very pleased that her students recorded the highest scores on this test that she had ever seen in her years of teaching, including students with various academic needs. The students certainly seemed to benefit from the added technology component this year to the catapult unit. Compiling a summary of their learning in a format that could be used to teach others as well as for review of the concepts they learned paid off.



Explain Everything is just one of the many apps our students have available in our 1:1 iPad Program for grades 5-12. It's a great screencasting app, allowing students to include all sorts of media in their presentation and edit the audio, text, and images with precision and ease. I've heard the app's inventor, Reshan Richards, speak a few times and know he is eager to continually improve his product. He has incorporated many suggestions from both students and teachers into this tool. As more and more of our students in Minnetonka Public Schools continue to use it, it will be fun to see what they create! 

Monday, September 14, 2015

Minnetonka's 1:1 iPad Student Training & Setup Checklist & Flipped Student PD

Grade 7 students learning the advanced features of
Notability's iPad App for a paperless classroom through Schoology
In two days last week, we distributed around 750 iPads to seventh grade students in their classrooms and walked them through the setup process in about 50 minutes (see our slideshow and checklist below). Today we did this with 350 sixth grade students, tomorrow we continue with another 350, and later this week and into next we begin with fifth graders at each of our six elementary schools. Rather than having 100-150 students in a room at once as in years past, we decided to do this in one classroom of students with two or three adults. We are finding this smaller group size allows for more personal attention and is a better and more effective way to get students set up. The amount of individual questions, password resets, confusion about which email address to use and when to enter in a student ID vs. an Apple IDs, etc., can better be addressed when you have less students in the first place. 

After this first day of initial setup, teachers in individual classrooms continue to work with their students in the days to follow. They show them how to use their iPad with apps like Notability and Schoology, completing what we call the "Digital Document Cycle" to do their assignments without paper. They will learn to use other core apps like Explain Everything, iMovie, and more. To lead this instruction, we have recorded a series of videos that our teachers show their students in a "Flipped Student PD Model" so the classroom teachers themselves do not have to be the experts in all the apps and their features.

This is Minnetonka's fifth year of a 1:1 iPad program. We added fifth and sixth graders to the program this year, so we will now have 6,260 students in grades 5-12 with an iPad. Rather than collecting iPads from our grade 8 through 11 students at the end of last year, we decided to have them hang on to their iPads for the summer, and are thankful we did. We had no reason to collect every device and had recently added an enterprise web content filter on student iPads that offered the same level of filtering off campus as students have at school. Not having to collect, touch, sort, and redistribute  the iPads for four grades of students was a great timesaver. We collected the four year old iPad2s of our 750 graduating senior and reused them for a fifth year in a row by redistributing them to this year's grade five students. We have been very pleased with the functionality of these iPad2s, originally planning to just get three years of use out of them. 

Related: Tip #1 for a Successful 1:1 Implementation: Execute the Rollout Carefully and Deliberately and more about Minnetonka's 1:1 iPad Program