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Welcome to Basic Technology Tools to Master John Woodring www.johnwoodring.com

Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

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This presentation will help you define what educational technology tools you should master to make integrating technology more beneficial for your students. Also, there are tips on lesson planning that integrate technology.

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Page 1: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Welcome to Basic Technology Tools

to MasterJohn Woodring

www.johnwoodring.com

Page 2: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Goals

•Identify basic technology tools to use in the classroom

•Planning technology integration based on standards and lesson planning schema

Page 3: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Think about it!

What are some essential ways you use technology in your daily life that

could be applicable to students’ learning?

Page 4: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

• Prepare the 21st Century learner/worker

• Great tools for formative and summative assessments

• Increases rigor in your curriculum (Blackburn, 2013)

• Differentiated instruction

• Asynchronous learning

• Students are more willing to create better looking products to demonstrate deeper learning (Bebell & Kay, 2010)

Why use technology?

Bebell & Kay (2010)

Page 5: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Think about it!

What has worked with education technology in your school?

What have you learned from the experience?

Page 6: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

• Read

• Write

• Compute

• Communicate

• Collaborate

• Critical thinking

• Creativity

What do we want students to do?

Page 7: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Gerstein (2014)

Page 8: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Think about it

What challenges are you experiencing in your school with

meeting the needs of all learners?

Page 9: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Meeting the needs of all learners

• Literacy Resources• Web Tools• Digital Information Resources• Social Networking Sites• Learning Management Systems

Grant & Basye (2014, pp. 26-29)

Page 10: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Literary Resources

• Ebooks• Blogs• Discussion forums• Text-to-speech tools

Page 11: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Web Tools

• Podcasts• Wikis• Media editors• News aggregators

Page 12: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Digital Information Resources

• Provides students with immediate answers

• Encyclopedia sites• Podcasts• Expert websites• Blogs• Media sites

Page 13: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Social Networking Sites

• Edmodo• Schoology• Edsby

Page 14: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Learning Management Systems (LMS)

• One website that provides:• Wikis and collaborative documents• Links to video and other online resources• Self and peer assessments• Productivity apps such as calendars and

to-do lists• Online discussion forums• Due dates and assignment instructions• A showcase where students can share

products

Page 15: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

LMS Examples

• Edmodo• Schoology• Edsby• Moodle• Blackboard

Page 16: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Dickerson (2011)

Page 17: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Lesson Planning

Page 18: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

No amount of technology will

save a bad lesson plan!

Page 19: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Lesson Planning Apps

•My Lesson Plan (iOS)

•Common Core Lesson Planner (Android)

•Common Curriculum (Chrome & Web)

Page 20: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

GANAG•G: Set the learning goal/objectives

•A: Access prior knowledge

•N: Acquire new information

•A: Apply thinking skills or real-world situation

•G: Generalize or summarize back to the goal/objective

Page 21: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Goal Setting

•Figure out the basic things you want students to do

•From here you should be able plan the lesson assessments and materials.

Page 22: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

CCSS RH.6-8.8

•Distinguish among fact, opinion, and reasoned judgement in a text.

•What do we want students to do?

•How do we want them to demonstrate this?

Page 23: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Access prior knowledge

•Do the students know the technology tools you want them to use?

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Acquire New Information•Teach the students how to use the

technology tool the way you want to use it

•Teach it yourself if you can

•Call for a Technology Coach or Specialist to help you.

•Give examples of what you want

•Provide rubrics

•Scaffold

Page 25: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Apply the Knowledge

•Allow the students to use the tools to complete the assignment

•All students do not have to apply the knowledge the same way

•Provide both content and technical feedback

Page 26: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

CCSS RH.6-8.8

•Distinguish among fact, opinion, and reasoned judgement in a text.

•What do we want students to do?

•How do we want them to demonstrate this?

Page 27: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

Generalize or Summarize

•Ask students how they created their project

•Especially if it was something unique

Page 28: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

What do

•you know?

•you still want to know?

Page 29: Basic Educational Technology Tools to Master

References•Abshire, Roy (2013, June). Helping teachers and students hit the bull’s eye. Poster

session presented at the Beaufort County School District Summer Institute, Beaufort, SC.

•Blackburn, B.R. (2013). Rigor is not a four-letter word (2nd ed.). Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education.

•Gallo, C. (2010). The presentation secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be insanely great in front of any audience. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

•Kharbach, M. (n.d.). Ed tech cheat sheet every educator should know about. Education Technology and Mobile Learning. Retrieved from from http://www.educatorstechnology.com/2012/07/ed-tech-cheat-sheet-every-educator.html.

•Pollock, J.E. (2007). Improving student learning one teacher at a time. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

•Stansburry, M. (2011, August 11). Ten skills every student should learn. eSchool News. Retrieved from http://www.eschoolnews.com/2011/08/11/ten-skills-every-student-should-learn/.

•Steinberg, S. (2013, February 01). 20 must-use education technology tools. The Huffington Post. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-steinberg/education-tools_b_2567342.html.