Saturday, April 25, 2009

WebQuest

Here is my WebQuest.

http://dev-ia.usu.edu/viewproject.php?project=ia:8565

Friday, April 10, 2009

Cameras and Photoshop

I love the idea of having cameras in a classroom.
It would really bring things to life.
And it was lots of fun to play with my picture and add different elements. I enjoyed it very much.
And I think for kids, it will be really fun and they will remember whatever activity we use with cameras, because it is so unique.

Here is my playing around with photoshop:
Before:










After:





Friday, April 3, 2009

Standards and Weblinks

Fifth Graders

___Standards___
Social Studies Standard 4:  Students will understand the 19th century was a time of incredible change for the United States, including geographic expansion, constitutional crisis, and economic growth
Educational Tech Standard 7:  Use telecommunications and on-line recourses to participate in collaborative problem-solving activities to develop solutions or products for audiences inside and outside the classroom. 
Language Arts Standard 1:  Students develop language for the purpose of effectively communicating through speaking, viewing, and presenting.

___Web Links___
I found a lot of great websites for Ellis Island.  I found some good ones and I found some horrible ones.  Here are some of the good ones that I found.

Here is an interactive tour of Ellis Island
http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/immigration/tour/index.htm
I like this one, because it has pictures and captions for each of the pictures.  It is a good resource for students to see the pictures.  It is organized well and very brief to keep students' attention.

http://www.ellisisland.org/quizzes/quiz_a.asp
I really like this quiz.  It's just about the United States, and it would be cool for the students to take this and explain to students that immigrants had to pass this sometimes to live here.  And maybe use it as like, oh, you didn't make it.  And narrow down people.

http://www.ellisilsland.org/immexp/wseix_2_3.asp?
This website is cool.  It shows stories of six different immigrants and their personal stories.  If I have 6 different groups, I could have them each do one different person and they can present their story to the class. 

I found a lot of really cool websites.
Some other cool ones that I found are
http://www.history.com/content/ellisisland/timeline
http://www.ellisisland.org/photoalbums/ellis_island_photo_album.asp



Friday, March 27, 2009

WEBquest contd.

This is going to be for fifth graders.

Students will be able to read, write, and discuss the origins, history, and structure of Ellis Island.

Students will create journals, use the internet, work in groups, and present the information that they found to the class. 

Friday, March 20, 2009

WebQuests.

Webquests are pretty cool.  
For my webquest, I am thinking about doing one for fifth grade social studies.  
In the UEN core curriculum,
1. The 19th century. and the civil war and the underground railroad.  I think that it would be really cool to have the students be different roles in the webquest.  They can research different people in the underground railroad.  I'm still thinking, but they could also make a letter to someone, make a poster, and present the information they found to the class.  That's one of my ideas.  
2.  Another idea is similar to one that I saw while looking up webquests.  In the fifth curriculum, it also talks about different trails that they need to know Oregon, Mormon, California, and Spanish.  I think it would be really cool to do something like that.  Where each student in the group is part of a different trail.  They research it, write a letter or something, make a poster, and present to the class.  

Friday, March 6, 2009

Web Site Evaluation

Answers to some questions about the website evaluation.
Some of the websites that I visited:

www.westfield.alpine.k12.ut.us/school/welcome.html

I love the interactive website. And at another website that I looked at, the Mount Logan Middle School website it has links to different interactive websites, which I enjoyed.

A. What Forms did you like/dislike? I like the ncsu evaluation form. I like the idea of a point system for evaluation. It makes it easier than just a yes/no question. It separated it into four categories: navigation & presentation, content, appropriateness, and scope & validity. And then it narrowed it down even more, asking more specific questions. Then it had the scale at the bottom. It was good. I didn't really like the school discovery one. It was really well organized, but I felt that some of the questions towards the end were irrelevant for a school website. They did not include many questions that they could have to evaluate school websites.

B. Were there any secrets you discovered by using an evaluation form?
I didn't really find any 'secrets' that I discovered. I did find things that I would not normally look at or look for, which is good. Normally, I would just skim through many of these things. I would not normally go through and consciously think about each of those aspects. It is nice to be aware.

C. What is the value of using a web site evaluation process?
I have found that oftentimes, I do all of this evaluating on my own. I am so used to checking the validity of websites that I do it automatically. For the most part, I find many of the evaluation forms tedious and common sense. Because I automatically check the spelling, check the links, think about the pictures, the purpose, the accuracy, the date. However, I may introduce this idea to my students, to understand how to check the validity of a website. Because kids just believe everything that they read on the internet.

D. Are there times that you would/would not use a formal evaluation?
There will be times that I will use formal evaluations. Maybe when I post a website on an information site, as a resource for parents, or have my students themselves evaluating different websites. However, on my own time and for my own resources and coming up with lesson plans, I will most likely not use a formal evaluation.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Microsoft Word/ Google Docs

These programs are both really cool. I am very familiar with Microsoft word, but I have never done much with Google docs. I am so glad that we learned about it. I loved the ways that you can send different things and easily update them. This will be nice to use in classrooms, from classroom to classroom. Other ways you can use this is during classtime between students. It also is a good way for students to get out of the class, and even the school and share ideas and stories with different people from all over the world. What a cool thing!