Monday, July 16, 2012

Aptivities for the Classroom: Magnetic Poetry

Poetry Magnets are a great way to help with word choice and to get students in the habit of being descriptive without putting them in a situation where they have to come up with their own words. The problem with traditional poetry magnets are that they easily get lost or randomly manipulated by other students.






What it Does

The Poetry Magnets app lets students manipulate words from categories to create their own poetry.  There are different categories to choose from, including one called endings, which lets them add ed, ing, or s to words.

How I Use it




One of my favorite apptivities for poetry magnets is to have my students create a poem in this app as a reflection piece for drop discussion.  This allows them to be creative and active in their reflection, but gives them a chance to practice description and word choice.  They can share their poems from within the app or they can take a screen capture of their poem and send the photo by email.




Aptivities for the Classroom: Learning Vocabularu

Electronic Flashcards

Flashcards are probably the best way to learn vocabulary.  In my classroom, I have found that students also excel at vocabulary when they can pair words with images to represent them.  The only problem is, some of my kids can't draw.  My solution: a vocabulary App called A+ Flashcards for the iPad or iPhone.

Advantages of A+ Flashcards

A+ Flashcards lets students enter in words and definitions on notecards.

They can then add pictures from a Bing search or they can choose to sketch their own picture.





Once they have added all of the information for a stack of cards, the students can study and sort the cards based upon their knowledge.

                                             
  Students can share their cardstacks with their teacher to earn credit for completing their assignment electronically.
Students can

Other Uses

A+ Flashcards comes preset with common SAT words to help students prepare for their college entrance exam.  It also pairs with Quizlet to assist teachers in setting up vocabulary assessments.

       


 This is a great way to make studying vocabulary tech-savy and fun!










Apptivities for the Classroom: Vocabulary Games

Vocabulary is one of my favorite things to teach.  Students see value in learning vocabulary, and if I can make it fun, they get really engaged in what we are doing.  When reviewing vocabulary, I've tried everything from games with a ball to Bingo, to just giving students time to review with notecards.  This past year, I was fortunate enough to have a few students with access to iPads and iPhones.  As a result, I had a chance to experiment with a few fun apps. Storylines for Schools is my favorite FREE app for vocabulary review.

What it does

Storylines for Schools is very similar to the game, Telestrations. Students begin with a definition and pass the device around to sketch and eventually guess the word.  The apptivitiy works best for small groups of about 3-5.

How it works












Sunday, July 15, 2012

Polyvore...Teacher Fashion


Fashion is My Passion 
It's no secret that I am addicted to fashion.  Keeping up with the latest fashion industry trends is one of my top 5 favorite ways to spend my time.  It's so frustrating when I hear that teachers are the worst dressed profession out there. In order to do my part in curbing this stereotype, I devote quite a bit of time to building my professional wardrobe to reflect my fashionista past time. My students absolutely love this!

Staying Organized 

How am I able to keep things organized? With Polyvore, of course! Polyvore is a site that allows users to create an account, clip images from store websites, and use these images to build outfits.  Users can also follow others, like their favorite outfits, and share comments and feedback with others.  

Here are a few of my favorite teacher outfits, including 2 casual Friday looks: 


 

Friday, July 13, 2012

Pinterest for Teachers

Unless you are living in some enclosed space without internet access or connection to tech savvy people like me, you've at least heard of Pinterest.  Maybe you've used it to find a recipe for a summer BBQ or gain inspiration for some DIY projects to spruce up your home.  Have you ever thought about using it to gain ideas for your classroom? 

What I've Found

I've seen everything from ideas to deliver content to organizational materials to some over-the-top student gift baskets that I would love to provide on the first day of school...if I didn't teach around 150 high school students. 


Here are some of my favorites that I've pinned over the last few days

Poetry Design 

My students could create their own designs, cut them out, and use them to create found poems from pages in our texts.  This adds a nice element of active learning to poetry and provides the opportunity to make poetry appeal to visual learners.


Pencil Dispenser


My students are always stopping me in the middle of class to ask for a pencil.  This might be a cute way to leave pencils out for students to take as needed.  I'm not 100% sure how well it will work, but it's worth a try. 
Theme Chart





This chart might a fun way to define each of our course themes for students so that they have a reference when I ask them to identify the themes of each novel we read and explain how the novel demonstrates the themes they chose. 
Objective Chart






My white board is always in need of a little bit of color.  I generally put the daily objective on my SMART Board, but it usually only stays for a few minutes before we need to use the board for other things.  These might be a fun way to integrate the to-do list on the board without using white board markers, which my students like to erase before class. 
Desk Organizer


This colorful organizer would be a cute way to organize all my desk materials while adding a little bit of color to my room.  White walls and neutral carpet always make things seem so sterile.  Just because I teach at a high school does not mean my students don't enjoy a bright, colorful atmosphere. Believe me, they notice!


This is probably my favorite thing that I found during my search.  I'm not usually a fan of little teacher sayings, but this canvas is simple, cute, and proves a point.  I love that it doesn't feature apples, pencils, letters, or any other stereotypical teacher clip-art.  I just might have to create one of these for my desk area, especially since we study the epic hero cycle and create our own super heroes during first semester. 




                                  Happy Pinning Everyone!

The Khan Academy

During my grad class this past week, my instructor introduced me to an amazing site that is definitely worth sharing.
Imagine managing a help study hall for students who are struggling with English.  This, I can help them with.  Now, imagine these same students have questions about biology or need a one-on-one review over solving linear equations to complete their math homework.  While I have some knowledge in this area, I am definitely not an expert. Enter, Khan Academy .


What's Khan Academy? 

According to their website the Khan academy houses over 3,200 FREE videos that offer instruction in algebra, physics, history, finance, and even calculous.  It even offers SAT prep sessions to gain some quick review without having to sit in a classroom full of other students.

The best part: students who miss lectures or are unclear about a concept from class can go on the site and watch a review tutorial of classroom concepts taught by an instructor.  They can stop the videos to replay the visuals over and over until they understand what is being taught.

Education of the future

Could this be the future for classroom teaching?  Is there a way for teachers to integrate these videos into their classrooms so that students can accelerate their skills or receive reteaching on their own time?

Not convinced? 

Check out this clip from 60 Minutes that shows how a school is using Khan Academy to in its curriculum.


Saturday, July 7, 2012

Facebook With Students?

I'll start out by saying that I've never used Facebook with my students. At this present time, my district prohibits it. Like many other teachers out there, I've often wondered how it could be used to enhance my teaching. My student are on Facebook 24-7, so could it be used as a motivational tool to get them talking about classroom content? Could it provide them a better opportunity to ask for help or stay informed about classroom assignments? After hearing that my district is considering lifting the Facebook ban with some major rules attached, I approached a friend of mine who has been successfully using Facebook with her students for two years. Here is a link to one of her blog posts where she discusses how using Facebook with her students has impacted her teaching.