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TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University

TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

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Page 1: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

TIE 300Session #1National Louis University

Page 2: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Welcome

• Welcome to TIE 300!

• Please Introduce Yourself…

Page 3: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Nicole

• Nicole M. Zumpano

• Lead Technology Teacher, CPS

Page 4: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Syllabus Review

• http://tie300fall2012.wikispaces.com

Page 5: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Course Structure

o Announcements and check-ino Student presentationso Lecture / presentationo Break o Technology hands-ono Web 2.0 Cool Toolso Homework

Page 7: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Tech in Ed Sign Up• Each student is responsible for signing up for one Tech in Ed

presentation.

• For your topic you will be responsible for creating a presentation and showing it to your classmates. You will be responsible for uploading your presentation to the appropriate page on the class wiki. This page should include: your presentation (embedded), a definition of the topic, and a minimum of 5 additional resources for readers to learn more about your topic. These can include videos, screencasts, links, research, images, audio, or any other appropriate resources.

• Please consider choosing a topic that you are interested in and have limited knowledge in.

Page 8: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Wikis• Wikis are collaborative websites

Uses:• Professional Resource: http://nicolezumpano.wikispaces.com• Class website:

http://englishstorytime.pbworks.com/w/page/19090124/FrontPage

• Collaborative Projects: http://goingwest.wikispaces.com• Wiki ideas for the classroom:

http://www.teachersfirst.com/content/wiki/wikiideas1.cfm

• Our Wiki: • Respond to the request to join the wiki!

Page 9: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Blogs• “Web-logs” listed in reverse chronological order

Uses:

• Professional Resource: http://zumpanowednesdayweb.blogspot.com• Lesson Plan blogs: http://305science.blogspot.com • http://zumpanotechlab.blogspot.com• Reflective portfolio/professional resource: http://teachinglikeits2999.

blogspot.com• Book Talks: http://mrbarrrm302.blogspot.com• First person living document: http://fftgrant.blogspot.com

• 10 Tips for the Education Blogger (Nov 2011 issue) http://www.learningandleading-digital.com/learningandleading

Page 10: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Reflective Posts• Set up for your own blog• Create a “welcome” post• Post the URL of your blog to our wiki

Page 11: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Break• How much time do you need?

Page 13: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Project Tomorrow’s Speak Up

Background: Project Tomorrow is a national non-profit dedicated to empowering student voices. Convenience sample given in fall 2010 to:

-294,399 K-12 students-35,525 teachers-2,125 librarians-3,578 school/district admins1,391 technology leaders

6,541 public and private schools from 1,340 districts34% urban29% suburban37% rural

Page 14: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Project Tomorrow’s Speak Up

• Speak Up National Findings 2010 released April 2011

• The New 3 E’s of Education: Enabled, Engaged, Empowered• “socially-based, un-tethered, and digitally rich learning”

• 6th graders:• 2005 half had a cell phone. Still true but 1/3 say they have a smartphone• 73% have an MP3 player (only 1/3 had them in 2005)• 25% use e-textbooks• In 2010 almost half of girls and 1/3 of boys regularly update their social

network site. An increase of over 125% from 2005….and most are not legally old enough to register on these sites….

Page 15: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Project Tomorrow’s Speak Up

• Key Trends * each trend has a “bottom line” statement:1. Mobile Learning

#2: Online and Blended Learning #3: E-textbooks

Page 16: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Project Tomorrow’s Speak Up

• Mapping a Personalized Learning Journey

Page 17: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Horizon ReportBackground: New Media Consortium creates an advisory board to look at emerging technologies that will have an impact on education in the next 5 years. Board contains members from education, technology and other fields. Spring 2012• -Three reports available: higher ed, primary & secondary K-12,

museum ed

Findings:• Near Horizon (next 12 months): mobile devices and apps &

tablet computing• Mid-term Horizon (2-3 years): game based learning & personal

learning environments• Far-term Horizon (4-5 years): augmented reality & natural user

interfaces

Page 18: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Horizon ReportKey Trends: (ranked for significance to education in next five years) *Challenges listed as well in report

1. Education paradigms are shifting to include online learning, hybrid learning and collaborative models

2. The abundance of resources and relationships made easily accessible via the Internet is challenging us to revisit our roles as educators

3. As the cost of technology drops and school districts loosen policies it is becoming increasingly common for students to bring their own mobile devices

4. People expect to be able to work, learn, and study wherever and whenever they want

5. Technology continues to profoundly affect the way we work, collaborate, communicate, and succeed

6. A new emphasis in the classroom on more challenge-based, active learning

Page 19: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Horizon Report• Report includes examples across disciplines as well as further

readings for each of the 6 technologies to watch listed in the “Horizon” section

Page 20: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Kaiser Family Foundation• http://www.kff.org/entmedia/entmedia012010nr.cfm

Background: Kaiser Family Foundation & Stanford University. Report based on a nationally representative survey of 2,002 3rd–12th grade students, including a subsample of 702 respondents who also volunteered to complete seven-day media use diaries. Survey given between October 2008 and May 2009

Findings:• Eight-18 year-olds devote an average of 7 hours and 38 minutes to using entertainment media

across a typical day (more than 53 hours a week). ‘Media multitasking’ (using more than one medium at a time), means they manage to pack a total of 10 hours and 45 minutes worth of media content into that timeframe

• Use of every type of media has increased over the past 10 years, with the exception of reading. In just the past five years, the increases range from 24 minutes a day for video games, to 27 minutes a day for computers, 38 minutes for TV content, and 47 minutes a day for music and other audio.

Page 21: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Kaiser Family FoundationFindings:

• Today, 20% of media consumption occurs on mobile devices—cell phones, iPods or handheld video game players. Almost another hour (:56) consists of “ old” content—TV or music—delivered through “ new pathways on a computer (such as Hulu™ or iTunes.).

• For the first time the amount of time young people spend watching regularly scheduled programming on a television set at the time it is originally broadcast has declined. However, the proliferation of new ways to consume TV content has led to an increase of 38 minutes of daily TV consumption. So television viewing—in one form or another—continues to dominate media consumption, taking up about 4. hours a day. Today 59% of young people’s TV watching occurs on a TV set at the time the programming is originally broadcast; fully 41% is either time-shifted, or occurs on a platform other than a TV set.

Page 22: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Kaiser Family FoundationFindings:

• Over the past five years, there has been a huge increase in ownership among 8- to 18-year-olds: from 39% to 66% for cell phones, and from 18% to 76% for iPods and other MP3 players. During this period, cell phones and iPods have become true multi-media devices: in fact, young people now spend more time listening to music, playing games, and watching TV on their cell phones (a total of :49 daily) than they spend talking on them (:33).

• About two-thirds (64%) of young people say the TV is usually on during meals, and just under half (45%) say the TV is left on “most of the time” in their home, even if no one is watching. Seven in ten (71%) have a TV in their bedroom, and half (50%) have a console video game player in their room.

• Top online activities include social networking (:22 a day), playing games (:17), and visiting video sites such as YouTube (:15). Three-quarters (74%) of all 7th-12th graders say they have a profile on a social networking site.

• Only about three in ten young people say they have rules about how much time they can spend watching TV (28%) or playing video games (30%), and 36% say the same about using the computer. But when parents do set limits, children spend less time with media: those with any media rules consume nearly 3 hours less media per day (2:52) than those with no rules.

Page 23: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Beloit Mindset• http://www.beloit.edu/mindset/2016/

• Background: Each August since 1998 Professors at Beloit College put together a cultural list of what life is like for incoming freshman

Page 24: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

Web 2.0 cool tool

“Powerpoint on steroids”

Features:

• Pan and Zoom• Import media (PPT slides, videos, images, PDFs)• Present online and offline• Realtime collaboration• Just-plain-cool

Page 25: TIE 300 Session #1 National Louis University. Welcome Welcome to TIE 300! Please Introduce Yourself…

HomeworkReflective Postings:

• Reflective Post #1: Introduce yourself. Give the reader some background about how you arrived at this point in your career. What is your experience and opinion regarding technology in education? Feel free to include photos that express your personality (yet are appropriate to the blog), provide links or videos that you feel will help the reader get to know you

• Reflective Post #2: Research. Choose a finding from the research presented to you in class. What stood out? Were you surprised by anything you saw? Do you think having information such as this available to you will help you reach your students on a greater level? Should we be cautious about research findings or take them at their word? Do you think students were portrayed positively or negatively by the findings?

Example of Introduction: http://rachelswainedtech.blogspot.com/2012/08/the-creation-of-this-blog-marks_28.html

Example of Research: http://www.ehayden356.blogspot.com/2012/09/suprising-research-findings.html

*September 20th class is ONLINE, not face to face