Discussions of various technological projects I've been involved in as an English teacher, English and reading learning specialist, software training specialist, graduate student, library examiner, avid reader, and new media enthusiast
Friday, December 05, 2008
CEA Conference 2009
Monday, November 24, 2008
OWL 2
Thursday, July 24, 2008
OWL
Monday, July 14, 2008
"Quotation Marks"
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Back at PBCC
Thursday, March 27, 2008
mac
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
RenWeb and Future Possiblities for English Techie
I am still interested in pursuing podcasting and attended a convention recently that offered two technology seminars. One was on podcasting and the other was on connecting your classroom to the world via the Internet. There were several possibilities in the second class concerning web field trips and classroom swaps. I'm going to purchase a mic for my ipod and try to create a podcast before spring. I'm optimistic about it because so many of the students have ipods. The school also has a fairly advanced learning strategies program that pursues technological assistance for students with special learning needs. Another possibility that may arise is that of an instructional technology committee. I've emailed the headmaster to know I'd be interested in participating, but I've not heard any more about the possibility of it.
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
iTunes U
Many prominent universities and colleges have already begun using iTunes U and freely distribute lectures, speeches, tours, videos, and other items to the public. Some colleges have decided to only give partial access to the public. For instance, some items like class lectures are only available to students, but a tour of the campus is available to the public. I got very excited about some of these podcasts and downloaded an entire World Literature course from NJIT. To see an article in Forbes magazine about Stanford providing free access to education via podcasts, click here.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
My First Web CT Class
The only problem I had was with the group project. It was hard to collaborate with people of varying computer knowledge. There was also quite a lot of miscommunication that would not probably have occurred had we been meeting face to face. It was a learning experience for me on several levels.
Turning Point II
Ingeniux V
- Student Learning Center Staff Resources
- Student Learning Center Student Resources (English and Reading sections)
- Belle Glade Student Learning Center page and child pages
- Belle Glade location page and child pages
- Belle Glade Professional Teaching and Learning Center
- Belle Glade Student Activities page and child page
While it's been fun working on some of these pages, I do have a tendency to get a little "tech- happy." My maze of pages is getting a little out of control. Since I'm leaving PBCC in August, I'm working on distributing the responsibility of these pages, as well as reigning them in a little so they're a little easier to manage.
I'm chairing a subcommittee for the Student Learning Center to make our pages more student friendly, and I hope to finish with that major project before I leave. Ingeniux is set up a lot like an outline. There are major pages with detail pages underneath them. We've met to discuss our main SLC page and the second tier of pages which includes our four location pages along with student resources and staff resources. In the midst of these changes, Ingeniux has received some major updates. Overall, the updates make the CMS easier to use and a little more visually appealing, but it's still something new to learn. To see what the pages look like now, go to www.pbcc.edu/slc.xml. Of course, when you check this site out in July, it will look much different.
Monday, May 08, 2006
Turning Point
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Ingeniux IV
Saturday, April 01, 2006
Ingeniux III
Online Tutoring 2
Wednesday, March 29, 2006
Online Tutoring
Some will say that we are jeopardizing face to face tutoring. If we offer online services, then why would a student ever have to come into the lab? Others may think that this medium is unsuitable for tutoring.
The truth is, if you apply the same principles to online tutoring that you do to f2f tutoring, this medium actually opens up more doors. For one thing, it almost forces the student to make a follow up visit to respond to the tutor's inquiries. The student will also ask the tutor more direct questions to get a benificial response. The student can't just email his or her paper to us with no question attached and expect us to edit it. Another benefit is after the tutoring session is over, the student is able to print the information to refer to at a later time. The tutor can also include hyperlinks to useful manuals or handouts. I see the lab's business increasing because of online services, not decreasing. This is just one more way to make ourselves available to the students.
Students have so many options available to them, and they are looking for the most convenient, most effective, and most affordable options. If they don't find what they're looking for, they'll go elsewhere or they'll give up. If a student who works all day, takes evening class, and goes home to her family needs additional help on an assignment, that student will have to make some serious life alterations to get to the lab. Some students don't see the benefit of disrupting their already busy lives to get extra help. They will go without help and continue to struggle, only doing what is required. Imagine, however, that there was a way for this student to access the help she needs without disrupting her life or even leaving her home. Of course she would take advantage of it. What about students who procrastinate. If a paper is due the next day, and it's 7 pm and I have a question, the student has no time to get to the lab to ask it. Imagine if online help is available at that late hour. This is real life. We pack so much into our day, that we don't have time for extra anything.
If the tutoring is effective, that is if our tutors are trained well or if we outsource to trained tutors, students will come back. These students may also begin to make the time to come to the physical lab. It's like we're reaching out to a whole new audience. Yes, some students who come to the lab now may decide that they'd rather stay home, but if they're already coming to the lab, they'll probably come back. And so what if their not physically in the lab. If we can show they are using our services, then that is all we need to do.
Our college is offering and expecting more and more technological knowledge. Courses are offered through Web CT, students use software in the lab, one of our general educational requirements is computer literacy, we're currently piloting PodCasting and watching a solar eclipse in Turkey. Given our department, we cannot allow the rest of the college to pass us by with their technological offerings.