Thursday, December 9, 2010

Making meaning through combination of pictures and script

This semester, 4th graders are building keynote presentations addressing regions of the USA and the indigenous populations that inhabited them before European colonialism.  The kids have researched, written scripts and collected images (from CC sources of course) in order to put together truthful and compelling documentaries.  This week we began constructing the slides in preparation for narration next week.  Though I wanted to present the 10-20-30 rule (10 slides, 20 minutes, 30 point font) that I learned from Guy Kawasaki at NAIS 2 years ago, it seemed a little advanced.  Therefore we focused on displaying images that match the script exactly. I prepared a minilesson that illustrated how the meaning of a documentary will come from the relationship between the images and the script.  An image on it's own leaves lots to the imagination, a script on it's own can create an image in the mind, but is less universally accessible.  The combination of a well written script complemented by carefully chosen images is simply a more powerful way of communicating.  When students do this well, it's an expression of understanding.   Isn't that why we teach?

Sunday, October 31, 2010

The New ipod touch

The new ipod touch is the killer device that I've been waiting for. With the internal low res camera and mic, it's now a legitimate device for creating content. Prior to this new model, my biggest criticism was that this device was limited for only capturing spoken language and many of the models did not even have microphones. Though one could buy external mics, they were clunky, easy to lose and made the relatively easy to use interface more difficult.

Anyway, we bought 10 of the new model the day it was announced and I've begun using it with our students. Last week, we took the 5th grade to the museum of Natural History to the Hall of Human Origins. Though they weren't prepared to use ipods to document their learning, I brought it to small groups to see what they would do. I showed them how to use sonic pics, and to talk about a diorama. here's the result.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

The joy of teaching media literacy

This afternoon, Hil, Andy and I started our LEO TV/School reporters afterschool class. I was slightly nervous, having never taught a video production class before, but we came in prepared with lots of things to do. We had a group of ten students, mostly 3rd graders, so it would be challenging to keep them engaged for 2 hours.

Our goal was to heighten awareness about media conventions/ story telling and help students begin thinking like journalists.

After introducing ourselves, we began with this video:



What followed was a full 30 minute conversation about the conventions that Spike Jonze used to engage the viewer and bring the lamp to life. Students had excellent insight, suggesting that the lamp was filmed like a baby, that it had a face, and we could see it's point of view. We also introduced the importance of lighting, music and other "mood enhancing" production techniques.

We took notes using this prezi:


After a break, Hil suggested that we do a role play to help students begin thinking like reporters. After a group conversation about the journalistic importance of who, what, where, when, and why, Andy approached me with a bunch of books and put them into my hand and I pretended to get angry and storm out of the room. As soon as I left, Hil and Andy directed the kids to write about what had just happened. Some students recognized that I was acting, and the role play was done to give them something to write about. Other students got into the drama and reported as if Andy and I really had a fight. Each student wrote their own "story," shared with the group, and we talked about the different ways to write about the exact same event. Enlightening.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Robotics Garden



We began robotics with 3rd grade last week. After explaining the we were only programming, not engineering, we began with Robolab 2.9. Robolab is an icon based programming language. Students usually program robots to turn by directing the motors to go in different directions for a small amount of time. Today we began learning about power levels. To practice programming with different power levels, students wrote 9 programs, only changing the power variable. The result were pretty flowers. By working together on one sheet of paper, we made collaborative artwork as well!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Google Earth and the Silk Road

This week, the 5th grade is visiting the American Museum of Natural History to learn about the Silk Road. We're doing a Google Earth research projects to complement the study. This project melds social studies, writing, geography and students personal interests. Here is a site outlining the project. I enjoy creating sites for project management. Day one involved going over the outline for the expectations in the project, specifically discussing the rubric so the student know how they will be evaluated. Take a look at the site I created simply to outline the scope and sequence of the project.

http://sites.google.com/a/theschool.columbia.edu/silk-road-project/

To prep for the Google Earth work, I've had the children researching and writing so that they are prepared with the contents for their GE tour. I'm often a victim of my own excitement about technology tools, and I overlook the small steps to scaffold students. In this project, I feel well paced. Over the last few weeks, I've been using the Google Search Curriculum published by Lucy Gray, Cheryl Davis and Kathleen Ferenz. With the tools outlined in these lessons, students are more capable of understanding how search works, and how to find the data they need to be successful researchers.

http://www.google.com/educators/p_websearch.html

I'll add more posts to describe the best (and worst) elements of this project.