Litchfield Technology Symposium June 10 and 11 Allison Arndt
Transcription
Litchfield Technology Symposium June 10 and 11 Allison Arndt
Litchfield Technology Symposium June 10th and 11th Allison Arndt Instructional Coach at Watertown-Mayer School District [email protected] Allison Arndt I have worked in the field of education for 11 years and have taught 1st, 2nd, and 5th grades. This year I took on a new role in the Watertown-Mayer school district as the K-5 Curriculum and Instructional Coach. I have spent the last three years working in a 1-1 iPad setting and have worked to integrate technology into instruction and staff development in order to promote choice, creativity, communication, collaboration, deeper thinking, and student engagement. Literature Circles Book clubs that allow students a chance to authentically discuss and reflect on what they are reading. Elements of Lit Circles •Student choice •Small groups based on choice •Meet regularly Literature Circles Traditional Model Multiple student roles that add to discussion of book Work tends to be worksheet based Can sometimes limit creativity If a student is absent, they miss out on discussion Updated Model Multiple student roles that add to discussion of book Work can be interactive and shared among group and teacher Possibilities are endless and students can mold their role to fit their interests Students can research about topic and make more connections Students can still contribute to a group if they are absent Teachers can record conversations to listen to the quality of discussions May take more training and management at the start, but students are very engaged Traditional Literature Circle Roles Discussion Director – asks questions and guides the discussion Connector – makes and shares connections Literary Luminary – finds, shares, and discusses important and memorable quotes and sections of the text. Summarizer – summarizes sections of the book Word Wizard – researches and shares vocabulary words with the rest of the group Scene Setter – discusses the setting and it’s importance to the story Discussion Director Blog or Discussion EdModo discussions Kidblog Student Samples Connector Coggle https://coggle.it Free and easy to use mind mapping tool Share with others for collaboration Organize and file in Google Drive Access revisions Add pictures Add live links Coggle You Tube Video Literary Luminary Wordle www.wordle.net create a word cloud from important and inspiring quotes from the text. Find audio versions of passages to share Record self reading (reread for fluency and expression) passages Students listen to and record own reactions and thoughts Summarizer TimeToast create interactive timeline using events in the story Add pictures and live links Upgrade to create groups and share work Word Wizard Quizlet – create vocabulary flashcards Online or interactive dictionaries Create a shared vocabulary journal in Google docs for the group to access and add to Use mind mapping tool to create graphic organizers of words Add pictures, examples, etc to words in journal Scene Setter ReadWriteThink: Comic Creator Other tips Students can record their discussions and share them with you so that you can listen in. Students could video record with camera and you can view Other Examples of Literature Circles & Technology Integration Mr. G Online Blog focused on technology in school http://mgleeson.edublogs.org/2012/04/03/ipadsand-literature-circles/ Drs. Cavanaugh (Higher level) Technology Enhanced Literature Circles Background and PDFs for student use http://drscavanaugh.org/lit_cir/ Time to explore! Go to some of the sites listed in the presentation and check out the programs. Start making a list of sites that interest you or you feel you could use