Monday, January 8, 2018

Week 15

Here are some highlights from Technology this week:
                            Week 15 (December 4 – December 8, 2017)               

Thursday Giggles
:            What did the bee to say to the flower?
                                                "Hey, Bud, when do you open?"

Pick and choose your favorites.  Don’t use every tool.  
Chefs don’t use every ingredient.  Gardeners don’t plant every type of plant.


THIS Google Form – Drawing for gift card.  Did you participate in Hour of Code?
Entries must be submitted by Friday, December 22, 2017 at 3:30pm.
Recipient will receive an email and card will be delivered to school site in January.


Quizizz.  I mentioned Kahoot! several weeks back.  Quizizz is similar to Kahoot! but the pace is different.  Each child will quiz at his/her own speed.  It is not spoon-fed by the teacher like the other platform.  They each have their place (Quizizz or Kahoot!).  You will find millions of pre-done quizzes online.  Or, you can make your own.  Printable data helps you talk as a team.  It helps you differentiate instruction.  You can build small groups based on the data.  It can also guide your intervention goals.  You can use it as a homework tool on Google Classroom.  Great resource!

Apple Watch. “Mrs. Culver, you inspired me to get an Apple Watch!  Now, I tell Siri to set timers for me.  The kids tell me I sound like you.”  Are you interested in getting an Apple Watch?  Here are some reasons why I think it’s fantastic for the classroom:
          a) Remote Mouse – From my wrist I can control my PowerPoint presentations (image below).
          b) Voice-activated timer – From my wrist I can set a timer.
          c) Voice-activated alarms – Set for specific days at specific times
          d) Voice-activated text message – To communicate with other teachers, I can use my voice alone to start a new text message or reply to an incoming message.
          e) Wrist-activated photo capability – From my wrist, I can take a picture through my phone of myself with my students for yearbook or newsletter purposes.  A wireless shutter button, if you will.
          f) Distance tracking for PE – The health app features let me track my walking or running distance.  If our class is tracing our distance for PE, I can do that through my Apple Watch.
          g) Phone call –I can receive or initiate a phone call with my voice.  I can carry on that conversation from my wrist. 
          h) Language Translation – If you have a language translating app on your phone, it may have a watch feature to go with it.
(Image of Apple Watch displaying the Remote Mouse app.  I controlled my PowerPoint presentation from my wrist a few months back.)

Google Classroom.  Did you know that you can assign an assignment to a select group of students?  Or just one student?  Yes!  When you load the details of the assignment into Classroom, simply choose the student area and select the set students you wish to have this assignment.  Why would you do this?  A student who is new to your classroom—backfill foundational tools (step-by-step).  A high-achieving student; someone who aced the pre-assessment.  A child who is struggling with content and needs to demonstrate mastery in a few foundational concepts.  What does it look like?  See image below.

Trash for Teachers.  Did you know that you can buy new supplies for super cheap?  Local stores in our area donate un-purchased items so that teachers can buy these supplies super cheap ($1 per pound).  National retailors donate wooden blocks, paper, glue, plastic, wires, electronics, etc. and this organization (T4T) resells these unwanted items to teachers who use these tools in the classroom.  Schools in various areas purchase these unwanted supplies to ignite creativity.  Innovation.  Exploration.  Discovery.  Robotics.  Engineering.  Plant discovery.  Research.  Collaboration.  Technology standards galore!  Do you have a disengaged child who isn’t responding to traditional learning?  Let that child explore, innovate, and imagine using these discovery tools: build a model, create an example, watch a YouTube instructional video, or present his/her research and findings. (Link in title.)  See Fresno address at the bottom of the page.  Teaching idea?  How about a popsicle catapult?  Have the kids research ideas online.  Have them record their data in Google Sheets.  Turn that table into a graph, chart, or table.  Write a project analysis report in Google Docs.  Present your findings/video and share what you learned.  Unleash learning with unlimited possibilities.
(Popsicle catapult with hypothetical data and graph.)

Amazon Smile. Is your site using Amazon smile?  Can your site sign up for free money?  When your parents purchase things from Amazon, direct them to Amazon Smile and have a portion of each purchase kicked back to your school.  Check here to see if that will work for your site.

Kindly,

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