Monday, November 22, 2010

Global Learning: This could be for you

The ePals website was a lot of fun to explore, two of it's features - in2Books and SchoolBlog - really grabbed my attention though.

The SchoolBlog feature seems like a great answer to the safety and accessibility issues that often arise when educators attempt to use blogs in the classroom. It provides classroom only and parents only access, search capabilities to easily sort though past posts and material, multimedia hosting ability, as well as calendar and survey tools. I think the best way to incorporate this tool into the classroom is to have it set up at the start of the school year and use it as an outline for what the rest of the school year holds. There can be sections for different texts, discussion boards for students to respond to one another, a FAQ section for parents and contact information for the students and school. All handouts could be posted on the blog so students can easily keep up-to-date with lessons if they are out of class. Blogs are definitely not a passing fad in education so I think it's important we embrace them, as meaningful and responsibly as possible.

As an English teacher, how could I not focus on the in2books feature? With this feature, students are matched up with adult pen-pals that they "meet" by writing introductory get to know you letters. Students study five different genres (realistic fiction, social studies, biography, folklore, science) and read one book from each of those genres. The students then discuss the book with their pen-pal while learning about it in their own classroom. I absolutely love this idea. It would be so much fun to have students reading a canonical text (like Shakespeare) and have the opportunity to communicate their thoughts and opinions and learn more about the text from an adult (who they've had time to get to know) perspective. The teacher could assign the same questions to the students and the pen pals and see how their answers match-up or differ, it then provides the opportunity for learning to take place on both sides. It also gives the students the chance to feel like an "expert" and they're opinion is being heard and understood. It could be an extremely empowering experience for students.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Bubblr: Poetry in Photos


I thought that Bubblr was a very cool tool, that could easily be utilized in the English Language Arts classroom. My first thought was to use this tool to help students better comprehend poetry. Students often have a tough time deciphering the imagery that fills poetry and this tool would allow them to illustrate their understanding in a creative and personal way. Students can find pictures that illustrate each line of poetry and create a slideshow to demonstrate their understanding, or even create deeper meaning for the poem. Bubblr easily allows you to embed these photo slides, which would work great for putting them on the class blog to share with others. I love the fact that students can use photography without fear of copyright infringement or other issues. I created a sample using the poem The Red Wheelbarrow by William Carlos Williams. There are so many ways you could use these tools in the ELA classroom, but this is the first one that came to my mind.

If you would like to check out the non-embedded version of my poetry in photos click below

Poetry in Photos by Nathan Thoma

Creative Commons Licensing: Flickr


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