Thursday, December 8, 2011

Final Reflection CEP 811

Christmas time is just around the corner and I sit reflecting on my last few months in this class, snow falling in the courtyard behind me...

I feel that I am an experienced teacher who uses tech as much as possible in my classroom. When I took this job I was very excited to be the first year in a lap top program for 5th graders. It was a year of innovation and integration, but also confusion, experimentation and defeat. When I enrolled in the MSU program I was searching for a way to have more control over how we use technology and where it is appropriate. And I am learning up a storm!
I see technology as a way of creating choice and differentiation in my classroom. There are so many different ways to express oneself using technology, from super simple to complex and eye catching, there is something for every style of learner. I have one student who was my techno-phobe until he made his first Prezi, now he is my Prezi expert and willing to share his know how to anyone who will put up with his lengthy explanations of Prezi's wonders! It was interesting to learn of the pedagogy behind why technology helps us meet our needs for differentiation and feel reassured that some of the practices that I put into place automatically are, in fact, best practice (for example allowing choice of medium for presentations, novelty, humor).
By learning Camtasia studio (which was a struggle, but worth it!) I created my first tutorial for Google Calendar which I sent home as homework with my students. By the end of a week I had each student set up with a Google Calendar, they had shared it with me and they were eager for more! I put them onto the Labs part of Calendar and soon each had customized their calendar and was exclaiming the benefits of different tools. Because of this STAIR I was able to minimize the amount of class time used to set up the Google Calendar and allow the students the freedom to I do notice that sometimes technology lessons can suck time from my classroom, one students computer freezes and the whole lesson goes crazy! Or the internet goes down..... All of these little problems make it hard to focus on technology when we also have large amounts of curriculum to get through.
My personal goals for the next semester are to create some more Camtasia Studio lessons for my students and to perhaps, teach them how to (although I am considering using Jing as it is free and a little more user friendly). I would like my students to come up with some ways to introduce next years 5th graders into the wonderful world of their computers, perhaps by having them create tutorials of the basics for 5th grade.

1 comment:

  1. Catie, this is such an inspiring post. I'm so glad the StAIR ended up being so effective and useful. I think Jing, instead of Camtasia, is a good choice for student screencasting. There is also screencast-o-matic, which doesn't require the user to download anything to their computer -- it's all browser-based, and recordings can go up to 15 minutes (instead of 5 like Jing). Though, it is sometimes best to 'force' students to keep their screencast concise and less than 5 minutes. Good luck with the rest of this year!

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