Unpacking the Tpack Backpack

You hear about it everywhere you go. Tpack this. Tpack that. But to really wrap your noodle around it (especially if you’re a visual learner) you need this ultra handy Venn diagram. (Thanks Dr. Matthew J. Koehler!)


I hope I'm not totally missing the mark here, but what it boils down to, for me, is that what you teach, why you teach, how you teach, what you use to execute what you teach is all interrelated and cyclical. They all interplay and influence each other.

And this really makes me think of the concept of the reflective practitioner. If something doesn’t go well or “as planned” (does it ever really go exactly as planned?) in a lesson, we need to sit down at the end of it and actually analyze why that might have been so that we can try to improve it for the next time. And referencing the TPACK theory (and diagram!) can help. A lot.

I am finding the need for this self-disciplined practice (reflection) is even greater now that we’re teaching in the 21st century. We are lucky enough to have access to some pretty amazing technology (hopefully) to aid instruction or even to take a lesson to an entirely new plane of reality. But when the promise is so large, it better deliver.

Let’s face it, when technology-enhanced or technology-based lessons fail, they fail HARD. I’ve seen it a million times. In-class demos, presentations. Something isn’t plugged in. You have the wrong cord or no adapter. You can find the “source” button. You don’t know “really” the ins and outs of the SMART board. You use it mainly as a projection screen. It sucks. You feel embarrassed that you weren’t prepared. Or even if you had prepped, now the tech gods were against you. You look bad. Now put yourself in the student/ viewing audiences’ shoes. That's easy. We’ve all been in the audience and whatever engagement or attention we may have been directing at the speaker is now totally gone and the presenter is left with Classroom Management 101 duty because we’re now rowdy and bored. It needs to be slick. It needs to work. We, as educators, need to know how to make it work.

But this isn’t the only FAIL that can happen when tech is in the mix. Because ultimately the A/V guy is called in and plugs something in, is crowned “hero” and then goes back to _____ (fill in the blank). There are bigger fails than this. Fails that the Techie can’t fix for you. And this happens when you haven’t thought about TPACK. This happens when you incorporate tech for tech’s sake or you use something with good intentions, and it backfires. Kids aren’t tall enough to reach the SMART board, their tiny hands can’t create enough pressure to pop that balloon. You do a science demo on the document camera involving a liquid and your shaky nerves spill the substance and total the camera. You use Bitstrips to teach about Upper Canada and discover that a) settlers aren’t that funny and b) you’re not a natural-born comic strip writer.

Going even deeper than this, your peers or faculty advisors or principals, witnessing your tech failure, feel that your taking-a-risk-and-trying-it-out-with-technology lesson could have enlightened, engaged, and expanded some minds had you just left OUT the technology in the first-place. This is a bigger problem because its a way of thinking about technology that is insidious and still fairly widespread - and not just in the “old-school” generations either! It may be safer not to fail, but is it wiser? Is it wiser not to use technology in the classroom? We need to put a stop to this kind of questioning or we'll never move forward. We need to lead. We need know TPACK inside and out.

Or maybe we expect too much from technology. Now that society can do everything with an iPhone except for shave with it, have we - as a supposedly, digitally native generation - set our standards too high for tech-related teaching tools? Is a tech-based lesson necessarily better than an ‘old school’ chalkboard or pencil and paper lesson? You can’t argue that there is a unique kind of anticipation and built-in expectation that teaching with new, shiny tech toys will make the lesson 10x more engaging and help students to understand the content better. If we ignore TPACK and don’t stop to reflect using TPACK, this assumption will come back to bite us every time we fail.

http://www.tpck.org/

Class Generated Anchor Chart

During my internship days, the Grade three class I'm observing co-created, through brainstorming, the character traits they thought would make a "good student". We talked a little bit about the personality types, practices and behaviours that are best for learning, being an active participant in the learning process and getting along with peers and teachers. We wrote the traits up on chart paper and this became our "ground rules" page for behaviour or, if you prefer, a nice goal to aim for (even on murky dismal days) in terms of attitude. I used the wonderful collage application Wordle to put the class generated anchor chart into a visually-pleasing poster for our classroom wall.

EdCampTO 2011 - York University

What a great day of new ideas and excited educators coming together and exchanging brain waves! Today was all about being a reflective practitioner and the model was totally inquiry based learning - which was great. I feel i've developed about a million more synapses than I usually do on a typical Saturday.

I (thankfully) decided to bring good old Bessie (my laptop) to the session and took some notes. I attended 4 sessions today. The topics were each given about an hour (though we did go over each and every timeslot, and I'm sure we all would have stayed chatting into the wee hours if York would let us - there was enough food to support us for at least a few days). But I digress. The topics I decided to attend were (and I paraphrase): How do we teach the 21st century learner if we don’t know what the jobs of the future will be?, CREATIVITY: IT CAN BE TAUGHT, ENVIRONMENTS FOR LEARNING - CREATING LEARNING HUBS, How do teachers want to be supported in their professional inquiry? All sessions were super motivating and I came away with a ton of resources and thankfully more questions than answers (which is the point, isn't it?)


Fellow Pre-Service Teaching Candidate, Natalie Gilbert, myself and EdcampTO organizer, Stephen Hurley on Saturday at the first ever EdcampTO.





I was going to highlight a few things and share a few resources that I came across, but then I thought: WAIT! What if I edit down my list and take something out that might have been of value to someone else even though I didn't personally connect with it? So since I'm basically like a courtroom stenographer in terms of the content I write down (my summarizing abilities are not great as you can tell from my verbose posts) I will copy and paste the notes I took below. I've added subheadings for the session so that there is at least some semblance of order. The notes contain thought starters, new ideas, great quotes and some resources all based around the topics discussed. I hope (if you couldn't attend) that there is some value here for you. Please leave a comment if you don't understand something or would like me to explain. I'd love to continue on the stimulating conversations held today!

How do we teach the 21st century learner if we don’t know what the jobs of the future will be?

Global citizen
Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking
Should we stream students based on learning styles?
Should we stream students based on strengths?
Jane McGonigle Gameification
Living on the Future Edge Ian Jukes
Fluency21
Khan Academy Play to Learn
Ted Talks - Science and Motivation
Arvind Gupta: Turning trash into toys for learning
Dan Pink on the surprising science of motivation
Explore Learning - Gizmos and Reflex
Microsoft Partners in Learning


During a breakout seminar on teaching creativity

CREATIVITY: IT CAN BE TAUGHT!

Not just about being “artsy” - creative problem solving, divergent thinking
Imagination - Thinking It > Creativity - Doing It > Innovation - Sharing It
Richard Florida - Rise of the Creative Class
How do we evaluate creativity?
Creativity in the Classroom: Schools of Curious Delight Alane Jordan Starko
Mindshare Learning
Teach them how to think not what to think

ENVIRONMENTS FOR LEARNING - CREATING LEARNING HUBS

Lobby of school as learning hub - considering principles of design
ASK YOUR AUDIENCE - the students, teachers, parents - what do they want?
Collective Visioning - Linda Stout

Physical spaces matter to learning. Not just a box with a roof (bells and cells)!
art gallery
chalk board
updates
who is it for?
teacher, students
touch screens
continuous programming
bench
TV streaming - what?
culture shift - graffiti wall - where students are ENCOURAGED to have a voice
living wall

buildings built for teaching, not for learning (staff room - closed off, off limits)
schools safe space - while parents are working, and a socializing place.
how do we know that the kids “feel” safe at school
Collective Visioning - Linda Stout - inner city schools building new schools - Lawfield.


How do teachers want to be supported in their professional inquiry?

Steven Hepple
Professionally Speaking magazine
How do teachers want to be supported in their professional inquiry?
Communities of Practice
Dufour
PLCs - Professional Learning Communities (should be a choice not placed together - should collaborate organically)
PLN - Professional Learning Network
Etienne Wenger
Self-directed inquiry
Promising Practice as opposed to best practice
Integrated curriculum
teacher inquiry - teacher as learner, reflective practitioner, how do we formalize this into a question that we are accountable for to move student learning forward?
How do we measure it?
Way beyond test scores.
How do I share it - great for your classroom, if that just stays with you and you don’t share your successes - for others to learn from and adopt/adapt - have you really succeeded?

Its not main stream - sharing, collaborative, team teaching, it takes time to build connections and networks, it assists your practice tenfold, you can share your action research successes, but are you preaching to the converted already?

parent engagement

Getting to Maybe - Francis Wesley
Social Innovation Group - in Waterloo. - complexity
digging deep -
teacher inquiry - not meant to be prescriptive, not a gospel

creating a conditions for inborn teacher inquiry - questioning, reflecting and curiosity is not always inborn in teachers - can we teach this?

If you were to learn one thing and continue to learn one thing all year long what would that be? 80% hadn’t been asked what they wanted to learn. Their jaws dropped and they paid attention the whole time. They were engaged.

Releasing teachers to spread “the gossip of reflection”.
Needs to be Guided reflection for most.

TUNE IN NEXT YEAR FOR EDCAMPTO 2012! I know I will!

Character Education

Today as I was thumbing through my associate teacher's book collection I noticed a few titles on Character Education: Consideration and Sportsmanship and BOOM! it struck me - being a teacher isn't just about teaching reading, writing and 'rithmetic! Holy cow! Teaching is a heavy duty responsibility. Its like parenting only we have to do report cards. I immediately researched character education online and found out about the HWDSB Character Builds initiative

. I must say: I'm impressed! Character building appears to be quite the hot-button issue in education that has spanned several centuries in society. (Where have I been?) On another planet apparently.

You talk about the main character a lot. Or cartoon characters or you'll say, "Boy oh boy! What a character!" but I haven't often thought - "Gee - that person has great character." Do we talk about this with our kids enough these days? We know that manners have to be taught, but what about humility, empathy, courtesy, sharing?...and I could go on and on and on. You often hear "the older set" say things like "kids these days, they ain't got no respect" only of course, they're more grammatically correct. Is this true? If so, its up to us future and current teachers to teach it better! We need to team up with parents and build us some care bears! We have DPA (Daily Physical Activity) - shouldn't we have DCB (Daily Character Building?) or does it just "pop up" organically in our core subjects - in the books we teach in Literacy block or maybe in a social studies lesson. Like those early settlers in Upper Canada. Boy they had a tough time! I bet they really relied on their neighbours help and support battling drought and scurvy and floods, etc.!

The school I'm observing in has a 'Caught Ya' program where an administrator hands out a little flyer with a student's name on it and checks a box if she spotted them or was told they had done something that shows character. And there is a large "missions and values" poster up on the hallway wall and it is repeated throughout the school on a variety of surfaces (though I didn't spot any branded coffee mugs). Is this enough? How else can we engrain these values in the students? I am curious to find out.

I ❤ Google+

Okay so I finally created a functioning circle for the Brock Ed Tech leadership cohort and I took part in a hangout. I've shared some thoughts and links via the stream and I've played some games (which are free and quite great for procrastinating - Angry Birds on a screen bigger than my iPhone is AMAZING). I am psyched to use this in the classroom and interact with students in a forum not yet poo-pooed like Facebook is. As far as I know, Google+ doesn't have an age restriction so as long as they have Gmail addresses they can take part which is great for primary grades. I'm still getting my sea legs with this new social networking tool, but anything by Google is pretty amazing in my books. Its nice to have something new and shiny that's not Facebook! What is your favourite thing about Google+ that I might not know about yet? I'm eager to learn more...

Epitaph For Steve Jobs

iLived.
iCreated.
iChallenged.
iInnovated.
iMoved
iBranded
iInspired.
iWillBeMissed.

Livescribe Smartpen Tutorial

Here is a how-to video I created using my iPhone4 and iMovie. It is for using the Livescribe Echo Smartpen and an idea of how to incorporate into a literacy lesson for JK/SK or English Language Learners

Fake Classroom Blog

For an assignment for a technology course - Here is a first attempt at creating a "fictional" classroom blog. Its fun to play around with different templates and designs. I hope to one day teach in a classroom using one such blog!

http://gradethreebloggasc.blogspot.com/

First Observation Day Reflections

Well we had our first day at our Block A schools today and I was beyond nervous. What would the vibe be? How would my associate teacher like me? Would he/she be friendly and encouraging? What would the class be like? Would they think I was a teacher or would they know I can barely teach my younger sister how to parallel park? I still feel I have so much to learn about the basics (like when a child asks you 3-4 times in 100 minutes to go to the bathroom do you let them go each time thinking they may have a bladder infection or do you clue in that they are trying to avoid doing the task?)

So when I was driving home this afternoon at 3:45 pm I thought - YIPEEEEEEE! My associate teacher couldn't be more open and easy going. She is full of tips and advice and put me at ease right away. The class is brilliant. There are 20 souls just shining in their little desks. I am over the moon with this school. Something really stuck with me today. Sitting in the staff room there was a supply teacher who said "there are some schools you have to go to when you get excited and others where you don't. Green Acres is the former." At our midday meeting, Brian, the principal had some inspiring commentary about what we were embarking on. He said, "you will get through to every child eventually - its just about having a positive attitude." Well, I'm starting out on the right foot then. Can't wait for tomorrow.

My First Bitstrips Comic!

What a great tool! So awesome that we get to make use of this tool for free during our time at Brock. Thought I'd put together a comic inspired by one of my anxieties for my first observation day in school tomorrow. Check it out!

Diversity in the classroom: diversity in learning styles

The most intriguing concept i’ve learned in my last few weeks here in the Brock BEd program has been differentiated instruction in the classroom. I’d always heard the expression “right-brained, left-brained” and thought that the responsibility lay in the hands of the learner to adapt to what was being taught and to persevere until they ‘got it’. How wrong could I have been? I’ve volunteered in numerous classrooms, but had never realized the silent balancing act that went on on the part of the teacher. Its embarrassing to admit. With the vast diversity in today’s classrooms it seems overwhelming, almost like you have to be a detective and piece together the best learning scenario you can for each student and if it doesn’t seem to work, try try again with something new. I’ve always revered teachers, but never conceived that this was part of their daily duty. If Lesson planning (its a science!) seems like a lot, try customizing certain aspects here and there throughout that (cohesive, flowing, effective!) lesson for each individual in a group of 30. That’s where the science becomes an art-form.

In Spec Ed I’ve learned about a variety of LDs, factors for behaviours (home, background context), gifted students, those with exceptionalities and the modifications we as educators incorporate for them in the classroom. Also, having learned about inclusive classrooms and the sad fact that there isn’t the ideal EA per spec ed student ratio in the real world - I feel my reverence for teachers getting even stronger.

Being a good, impactful, inspiring teacher for each student should be the daily goal. Is that a lot of pressure? Yes. Is it idealistic? Yes. Is it necessary to strive for? Absolutely. That’s what’s so exciting about the technologies we are learning to incorporate into our pedagogical approaches in the Ed Tech Leadership cohort. We have the advances to ensure everyone can hear the lesson clearly and understand what’s happening. We have tools that can help students take better (interactive) notes. We have smart boards to hold their attention and execute lessons using digital manipulative to aid in comprehension. We have hundreds of web 2.0 tools at our fingertips to make the lessons we teach more engaging and collaborative. What are we waiting for?

We're All In This Together


I couldn’t be more excited to become a teacher. I worked very hard to be accepted into the bachelor of education program and have left my pretty successful career behind to pursue this new chapter. These first few weeks in the program have been a whirlwind and I’ve started to get my sea legs. Enough class audits and readings under my belt to gain some balance and have time to reflect. Wow. I even know which class I have next and I didn’t even have to peek at my schedule! (Finding the correct classroom is another matter entirely.)

There is one thing I’ve come to realize these last few weeks: the program couldn’t be more different from what I expected. Having only my undergraduate studies and my recent career in pharmaceutical market research to compare to, this experience is worlds away from the environment I’ve come to accept as the norm: competitive. Here at Brock, and I’m sure at other “teacher’s colleges” across Ontario and Canada, the feeling of community is overwhelming.

First of all, the faculty advisers smile in the hallways and say hello. In class, they are hopeful, encouraging, inspiring and upbeat. They are confident in us and are fostering a community of learners from day one. One of the main tenets of many of the courses so far has been sharing and collaboration. This is a tad foreign to me. Not something I’ve practiced since my mom used to lecture me to share my toys with my younger sister. In the business world, your good ideas are your ticket to success. If you share them with the wrong person, someone could steal your idea, take credit for it and prosper. If you collaborate – you waste time when you could get it done faster on your own. Time is money. Ideas are money and money is paramount.

Methods and Classroom dynamics classes have already emphasized the importance of creating a community feeling in your class. As a teacher its up to you to model the kinds of behaviours and habits you hope your students will adopt and practice throughout their lifetimes when it comes to learning new things. What a paradigm shift this is for me. Teacher and boss had always been synonymous for me (they held the power), though that power is not something I sought out when applying to this program. I’d always hoped to be the kind of teacher that saw herself not as leader, spouting out orders and hovering over ready to assess, highlighting failure, but as an eager participant in the learning process treating her students with respect and making learning fun and learning from and with them!

Last week someone uttered something that really hit home for me: if you share your work you’re not going to lose it. We’re learning about real time collaboration using web 2.0 technologies like Google Docs. Already our cohort is working together to help make meaning out of complex texts. It only took a matter of days before small groups were forming to split up readings, create study groups and exchange coping strategies and organization tricks. A classmate volunteered on Friday afternoon to stay AFTER CLASS and help me. Where am I? I don’t recognize this landscape! But I could get used to this!

Excuse my rudeness...WELCOME!

I guess in blogville you're supposed to thank people for dropping in before you go hog wild posting all sorts of entries on your blog. So first, my apologies for not laying out the welcome mat a few weeks ago when I started my blog and second, welcome! bienvenue!

you may be wondering what this blog is all about. well its a little bit of this, a little bit of that (kind of like grandma's elusive pierogi filling recipe) and a whole lot of: WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? Its curiosities and investigations and inquiries and lightbulb moments. Its cool stuff. Its techie nerdy stuff. Its educational theory and trends stuff. Hopefully culminating as my digital portfolio documenting my (here's hoping!) progression and advancement into the tech leadership sphere as I participate in said program at Brock university where I am currently a P/J teacher candidate.

so join me on this fun journey as I discover a whole lot about technology and web 2.0. The goal here is that I learn something new everyday that I can apply in our 21st century classrooms so that I can keep up with those brainy, tech-saavy whippersnappers who, frankly, have just as much to teach me as I do them.
Polish Pierogi [Online Image.] Retrieved from http://tinyurl.com/3h69lap

Ed Tech Budget Concerns

I want to be a leader in educational technologies. I want to bring these technologies into the classroom and discover the myriad ways they can explode open the learning experiences of students. I want to help those with a learning disability take better notes. I want to include everyone (even the shy students) in fun democratic group activities using things like clickers. I want to skype with an astronaut or take the class on a real time safari.

Most of all - I want to understand how to bring these technologies into the classroom without having the budget to do so. Either my rent-to-own bill at Best Buy will be through the roof or I'll have to rob a Future Shop (in a Robin Hood way of course, ITS FOR THE KIDS!) Now of course I'm being a little dramatic as a teacher candidate should not do something that might create a police record for themselves, but where's the budget? Guess I better sign up for Fundraising 101?

This week I heard a variety of viewpoints about ed tech. One faculty adviser said that I shouldn't be so enamored with all the techie stuff because in Whitehorse (for example) I would have to learn to teach with nothing. Good point and point taken. Another adviser shared that his school was able to acquire smartboards because a local convenience store donated the proceeds of their Nevada ticket sales. Of course this enraged some families in the school whose cultures didn't believe in gambling. A lot of DIVERSE perspectives here aren't there? But like my mother always says "you can't please everybody all the time."

....Although you may be able to if you use a smart pen and write them a really nice note. ;)