CEP416 F09online Syllabus Rev3

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    CEP 416 F09 (online)- Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Greg Casperson Dr. Patrick Dickson

    [email protected] [email protected]

    http://gcaspers.fts.educ.msu.edu 517-355-4747 (o)

    517-243-8883 (c)

    Course Purposes

    CEP 416 will expand your knowledge and skills regarding the rapidly changing field of educational

    technologies. Although an elective course, the increasing pressure to hire teachers who can instruct their

    subject matter content using diverse technologies in the classroom makes the course content much more

    than optional.

    The course does not have a field component to it; however, the course prepares you to integratetechnology into your internship and to get a job afterward. Reflecting these purposes, you will complete a

    series of weekly lab projects designed to help you develop skills with a variety of free, web-based

    applications. You will also develop a web-portfolio that highlights your growth and expertise with

    technology. The web portfolio prepares you to document your internship experiences and gives you a leg

    up on the job market.

    Learning New Technologies Perspective

    We believe that learning how to use new technologies on your own is a crucial part of what it means to be

    literate in new technologies. Toward this end, the course will not walk you step-by-step through how to

    use each of the technologies discussed. This kind of scaffolding may be helpful in the short-term, but doesnot assist you in developing independence as a consumer and user of new technologies. Rather, you will

    be expected to build learning strategies as you progress through the course. For example, you might dig

    into the technology directly, locate tutorials and tipsheets to guide your way, and or ask colleagues for

    specific help. Thus, you have two primary learning goalsto learn how to use specific technologies and to

    learn how to learn about using new technologies. A key component of learning how to learn will be

    building a Personal Learning Network or PLN. This is a network of people and resources you can draw on

    and communicate with to build your learning.

    ANGEL, Ning, and the Wiki Gallery

    ANGEL: (http://www.angel.msu.edu) Log on using your MSU NetID and password. The link for our

    course will show up on your course menu. ANGEL will mainly just be for maintaining grades.

    CEP416 Ning: (http://cep416.ning.com) Log on to access the main content and links to resources of our

    course, contribute to discussions, and you should access it on a regular (multiple times a week) basis.

    CEP 416: Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Fall 2009 Dickson & Casperson

    1

    Course Syllabus and Schedule are subject to change. Every attempt will be made to notify class members of such

    changes.

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://gcaspers.fts.educ.msu.edu/wp/http://www.angel.msu.edu/http://cep416.ning.com/http://cep416.ning.com/http://www.angel.msu.edu/http://gcaspers.fts.educ.msu.edu/wp/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    Wiki Gallery: (http://cep416f09online.pbworks.com/) A wiki-based gallery has been established to

    showcase students work in this course. Each person will be responsible for updating her/his links in the

    gallery. We will be sending you an email invitation to the wiki.

    Required Texts

    No text purchase is necessary as all readings will be available through links from our labs or MSU

    libraries.

    Research Participation

    As educators, we strive to make data-driven decisions that help us evaluate student learning and

    pedagogical strategies. This data informs the conversations we have amongst ourselves as instructors and

    students and can also be useful in sharing with the wider educational community through publications

    and presentations. To protect you as students, we follow three principles. First, participation in research

    is voluntary; in the event that research is a requirement of the course, alternative assignments will be

    available for you to receive maximum credit. Second, participation is anonymous. Any personally-

    identifying information collected will be removed or changed to help protect student anonymity. Finally,

    formal research projects will have been reviewed and approved by the Universitys Institutional Review

    Board (http://www.humanresearch.msu.edu/) to help protect your rights as participants.

    Policies

    Academic Honest Policy: "The principles of truth and honesty are recognized as fundamental to a

    community of teachers and scholars. The University expects that both faculty and students will honor

    these principles and in so doing protect the validity of University grades. This means that all academic

    work will be done by the student to whom it is assigned, without unauthorized aid of any kind. (SeeGeneral Student Regulation 1.00, Scholarship and Grades, for specific regulations.) Instructors, for their

    part, will exercise care in the planning and supervision of academic work, so that honest effort will be

    positively encouraged." - from MSU General information, policies, procedures, and regulations, p. 24.

    MSU Student Regulations: Participation assumes that students will abide by the Universitys Student

    Regulations (See Spartan Life: http://www.vps.msu.edu/SpLife/). Violations of these codes or legal

    statutes may result in penalty in your course grade or dismissal from the course and/or university.

    Course Requirements and Assessment

    Reflection-Blogs and commenting (25%): Each week you should be writing in your blog severaltimes. Your blog should be a place for thinking through how you are learning technologies, limitations of

    technologies for learning, how you might implement technologies in your teaching or with your students,

    issues of student learning, issues in school use/non-use of technology, etc. Usually each week there will be

    one assigned blog post but the rest you are free to choose. If it is not the assigned blog topic of the week,

    another blog should be highlighting the technology you explored, linking to examples you created, and

    discussing positives and negatives of your experience or take on the technology.

    CEP 416: Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Fall 2009 Dickson & Casperson

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    Course Syllabus and Schedule are subject to change. Every attempt will be made to notify class members of such

    changes.

    http://cep416f09online.pbworks.com/http://www.humanresearch.msu.edu/http://www.vps.msu.edu/SpLife/http://www.vps.msu.edu/SpLife/http://www.humanresearch.msu.edu/http://cep416f09online.pbworks.com/
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    Another key component of reflecting is also reflecting/commenting on others blog posts. Within the first

    two weeks, you will be assigned to a "House" or group of 3 to 4 in addition to a specific help partner or

    "study buddy" within the House, in order to help each other out but also to give you a start on your PLN.

    At a minimum, you should be commenting on each persons blog in your House once per week, but the

    more you comment on others (both classmates and those whose blogs you choose to follow) the better you

    will be able to write some of your own blog posts.

    You will receive feedback three times during the first of the semester on your blogging/commenting,

    each representing 5 of total (25%). The first feedback will be formative with specific suggestions for

    improvement and full grade as long as there seems an adequate attempt to participate as this will be a new

    process for many of you and is not an easy habit to learn. The second evaluation will be mainly formative

    but will also evaluate your attempts to improve participation. By the third assessment, it is expected you

    will participate in blogging and commenting many times per week. Assessment will primarily be

    summative with some formative feedback as necessary, and your grade will reflect your overall

    participation. At the end of the semester a final grade (10%) will be given based on your total participation

    in blogging/commenting, with weight given to the final half of the semester.

    Labs (25%): As we introduce new technologies, you will be asked to perform a series of tasks that help

    you learn more about the specific technology. The projects are, in a sense, the practice ground for you to

    explore these technologies in greater depth. Details of each technology exploration lab will be posted on

    our class site. You will receive 1 lab grade for each week regardless of the specific number of labs that

    week. All labs for a week are due by 4pm Friday of that week (technically you will have the weekend to

    finish these if necessary but will not be able to rely on feedback from instructors during the weekend, nor

    will any excuses be accepted late Sunday evening). We will provide feedback for labs each week in

    addition to your overall weekly lab grade. You will receive full points as long as you provide clear evidence

    successes and/or failures with lab of the week.

    *A special thanks goes out to Brandon Blinkenberg and Joe Freidhoff for their help in designingmany of the past labs.

    Professional Web Portfolio (50%): (20% at midterm and 30% at finals):A major project in

    this course is to develop a web-based portfolio that presents you as an aspiring teacher who has fresh

    ideas about integrating technology in your classroom. Your web portfolio is an opportunity to richly

    capture your ideas regarding the technologies introduced in this course and present them in a compelling

    way to a professional audience including administrators, mentor teachers, and field instructors.

    That said, there are two primary objectives in creating these portfolios. The first is for you to establish

    your own teaching identity. Imagine this portfolio is the first impression that employers, students, and

    parents will have about you. Youll need to think carefully about how you want to brand yourself. Oneof the elements that will contribute to your impression will be a working resume. The second objective of

    this portfolio is to convince your audience that you have fantastic ideas about using specific technologies

    in the classroom. Over the course of the semester, you will select at least TWO technologies that are

    introduced in the course and create polished, web-based experiences that demonstrate your ideas for

    using them in a specific classroom context. One of these should assume you work in a school is

    technology impoverished which only provides one computer and projector per class, while one other

    CEP 416: Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Fall 2009 Dickson & Casperson

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    Course Syllabus and Schedule are subject to change. Every attempt will be made to notify class members of such

    changes.

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    should assume technology enriched school, with possibly 1to1 computers/netbooks for each student. Such

    technologies may include:

    1. Blogs2. Twitter3. Web Pages

    4. Wikis5. Image Use6. Web Presentations / Digital Storytelling7. Sound / Audio Podcasting8. Video / Vidcasting9. RSS aggregators (news readers or iGoogle, netvibes, pageflakes, etc.)

    10. Social Bookmarking11. Personalized Web (full use of Netvibes, iGoogle, Pageflakes, MyYahoo, etc.)12. Internet Calendars13. Assistive technologies14. Many others of your choice (this may include Google Earth, Web Conferencing, Ning, etc.)

    At the very least, part of your web experiences will want to capture the essence of a lesson or unit

    including:

    1. What learning objectives are you addressing?1. In this plan, you should start by identifying a specific grade level and a body of

    knowledge you would like students to learn (subject/content matter). You should

    consult the Michigan Grade-Level Content Expectations (GLCEs) and the Michigan

    Educational Technology Standards (METS) and identify which specific standards you

    are addressing.

    2. What is the substance of the lesson/unit?

    1. Your audience will want to gain a clear picture of what students will be asked to do andwhat the desired learning outcomes are.3. What will the performance products look like?

    1. To strengthen your portfolios, you will not just tell your audience what students will bedoing, but you will actually show them mock-up examples of what you expect the

    finished products will look like. By creating these examples from scratch, you not only

    help your audience gain a better understanding of the lesson/unit, but you are also

    more convincing by showing that you actually have the skills to pull it off.

    These sections of your portfolio will undoubtedly include multimedia elements and should be available for

    your audience to view directly on the web without downloading. That means you are not just linking to

    pdfs or docs, although these formats might supplement your main pages. This is an excellent opportunity

    for you to set yourself apart from your peers so create something impressive.

    This portfolio will be assessed at the midterm (20% of grade) and the end of the semester (30% of grade).

    The midtermwill require a basic portfolio layout, one of the technology integration plans, anabout page, and a draft of your resume.

    The finalwill require a more polished version of resume, an about page, a minimum of twotechnology integration plans (one can be from midterm), a link to your blog, and an invitation/

    welcome to your portfolio.

    CEP 416: Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Fall 2009 Dickson & Casperson

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    Course Syllabus and Schedule are subject to change. Every attempt will be made to notify class members of such

    changes.

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    Flexible Course Schedule

    This semester the schedule has changed quite a bit from past semesters, both to reflect on the changing

    world of learning with and about technologies and because of the diverse interests of the students in the

    course based on our recent survey. We will start, as mentioned earlier, on skills for building your PLN andincreasing your ability to learn how to learn about technologies. The first several weeks then will reflect

    this focus to help build a foundation for learning about technologies, but then after the focus will be to

    give as much opportunity for you to choose technologies most important to learn in your particular

    context. Since this schedule of content has changed so much, it may need to be revised some as we go

    forward. Care will be taken in making changes that most benefit you and for informing you of any such

    changes. Please regard the following as a rough draft that you and I will revise as the semester progresses.

    I also recommend that you take as many opportunities as possible to begin exploring early on, some of the

    technologies you might choose to focus on later in the semester by looking ahead in labs, by asking your

    PLN, by searching, etc. You can see a list at most things that have been covered in the past here:

    http://teachingandtech.wikispaces.com/

    CEP 416: Teaching & Learning with Technology

    Fall 2009 Dickson & Casperson

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    Course Syllabus and Schedule are subject to change. Every attempt will be made to notify class members of such

    changes.

    http://sites.google.com/site/cep416f09online/schedulehttp://teachingandtech.wikispaces.com/http://teachingandtech.wikispaces.com/http://sites.google.com/site/cep416f09online/schedule