I will be reviewing chapter #10, which focuses on science in
the classroom. I am going to be an elementary school teacher, but I am also
getting an endorsement in science which will allow me to teach science at the
middle school level. Science was never my best skill, in fact, I hated it in
high school. I never thought I would ever be a science teacher one day. I took
an earth science class at my junior college with a wonderful instructor. He was
a meteorologist by trade, and made the class so interesting and even exciting
to me, and this is really what changed my mind about science all together. I
only wish I had had science teachers like him when I was growing up. Science is
one of those subjects that is constantly changing, and that is what I like most
about it. The science curriculum is not like math: math is unchanging, and
constant from year to year. You are taught math and you memorize what you are
taught and you regurgitate it on the test. Science is so much different.
Science is about understanding and applying what you are learning. It is about
understanding how our bodies work and how our world works. I think the best
feeling is to learn something in a science class, then go out into the world
and experience it for yourself and realize that you understand exactly what is
happening. Isn’t that amazing? There are so many different realms in the world
of science education. There is physical science, life science, earth science,
space science, and much more. I am a big fan of environmental and space
science. There was one online resource listed, a video of Earth’s water cycle,
that I think would definitely be beneficial to show to an environmental science
class. The water cycle is the basis of everything, and it is really important
for students to know and understand. There were several online resources for
astronomy as well. I think I will enjoy teaching about space the most, because
it is a mystery to most of us. There was an online link called virtual skies that would be neat to show
students. Science has been placed on the back burner in recent years due to the
demand for better reading and mathematics testing results. I hope to show my
future students how interesting and amazing science really is, and why we
should never overlook it for other subjects in the curriculum.
Practitioner's Reflection - Prompts #1-10
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Prompt #9
I will be discussing issue #13, which is about interactive
whiteboards. Interactive whiteboards are amazing pieces of technology! I did
not have these in my classrooms during elementary or middle school, but started
seeing them in high school. The teachers tended to be territorial of them, so I
never got to use one until I started student teaching. I wish I had more
experience and knowledge of what they can do, because they truly have a mind of
their own. From my experience in classrooms, the students (especially the
younger ones) love their interactive white boards. There are so many creative
things you can do with them. When teaching math, you can pull up grid lines and
charts to make graphing easier. One classroom I was in also charted and tracker
all of their daily behavior through a program on their interactive white board,
called Class Mojo. The students got to go up every day at the end of school and
chart their behavior for the day. The kids would get so excited to go up to the
SmartBoard, and they loved that they got to interact with it. Every classroom
in the district I grew up in now has these wonderful pieces of technology, and
I hope I have one in my classroom. There are so many ways to utilize the
interactive white boards, and in my opinion they are so much greater than the
regular old white boards or the dreaded chalk boards!
Prompt #8
I will be discussing issue #7, which is the use of
Wikipedia. When I was in middle and high school, we were strongly discouraged
from using the site Wikipedia. Our teachers strongly pushed that although
Wikipedia may seem like a decent and credible source to use, it was not. My
high school even blocked the website all together in an attempt to get the
students to stop using it. The truth of the matter is once you block a website
and tell students they are forbidden from using it, they are more likely to
test the limits and use it. In my personal opinion, I think Wikipedia should be
seen as more of a friend than as a foe. While I do agree that a lot of the
information provided on there is written by sources that have no credibility, I
also think that Wikipedia provides a great outlet for students to get a general
idea of certain topics. When researching a potential topic for a research
paper, students can look to Wikipedia to get a general idea of what they might
want to research further. Should the students be taking information from
Wikipedia and using it as a source in their research paper? This probably is
not the best idea. Wikipedia is a great starting point for students who are a
little lost or just cannot decide on a topic. Since Wikipedia is available for
editing by anyone, which usually consists of people without any credibility, a
lot of opinions are inserted within articles. Students reading articles on
Wikipedia could have the opportunity to oppose the thoughts and opinions of
certain contributors. This gives students the opportunity to think outside of
the box and contradict a contributor’s thoughts. For these reasons, I do not
think Wikipedia should be banned from student use. Instead, I think teachers
should just advise students on how to use Wikipedia to their benefit and make
sure they understand that some of the information is unreliable.
Prompt #7
Educators need to be “skating” towards the new pieces of
technology that are out there instead of falling behind and only focusing on
the technology that is popular today. On the second adoption horizon, which
includes tools that are likely to become popular in the next two to three
years, I was interested in two of the concepts listed. Game based learning is a
wonderful way, in my opinion, to get students engaged in what they are
learning. I saw this method first hand when I was doing field experience last
year in a second grade class. The students looked forward to the time that they
got to use the computers to play math and reading focused “games”. The math
games were mostly just addition and subtraction facts, but there was an added
excitement that the student would earn points for correct answers. The reading
games were focused on the students reading short stories and then answering
some comprehension questions. The second graders did not even realize they were
doing schoolwork most of the time, they just looked at it all as a game. I
think this is a great way to promote practice and extra learning. The students
can also access these online games at home, a great way for them to study and
practice on their own time while still having fun. Another concept under the
second adoption horizon is the use of mobiles. Many schools are purchasing
iPads and iPod Touches for their students’ use. Schools and individual teachers
are then creating their own apps and websites with tools for the students to
use both inside and outside of the classroom. This is definitely something that
schools need to “skate” towards. Most children in today’s schools have some
sort of electronic device at home, whether it be a computer, tablet, or
cellphone. Having apps and websites for the students to access at school or at
home would allow them to have extra practice in subject, help them to review
material, and also allow them to ask questions to their teacher and/or peers.
One idea under the far-term horizon, which predicts four to five years from
now, is about the use of flexible displays. I definitely think this is
something we are going to see in classrooms in the near future. Flexible
displays are basically devices, similar to a tablet, that are built into books,
desks, and walls. I think this is what will eventually take over the use of
textbooks. It is important for teachers and educators in general to look ahead
to the technology of the future, because eventually we will likely be using
that technology in our own classroom.
Prompt #6
It is truly amazing to think how technology has evolved over
the last few decades. I have been a student for almost fifteen years now, and
it is even more amazing to remember what we had in my first grade classroom
compared to what we have in first grade classrooms today. When I was in
elementary school, technological advances were just starting to make an
appearance, and that appearance was very slim. Some of the classrooms at my
school has a single, cube-like Apple desktop computer. Attached to these big
boxes were an even bigger tower, which made the computer run. We very rarely
used the computer in the classroom. Most of the time, they sat shut off in the
corner collecting dust until the end of the school year. Now that I look back, I
think the reason we never used them was because our teachers did not know how
to use them. There was probably never any formal training right away, and they
were foreign objects to all of us! Another piece of equipment I remember were
the old overhead projectors. While you still occasionally see them in a
classroom today, likely being operated by a teacher who refuses to accept new
technology, the noisy machines were staples when I was growing up. Now, they
are obsolete compared to things like the SmartBoard or electronic projectors on
the ceiling. When I entered into middle school, I remember seeing and using a
lot more of the technology in the school. We had a library with about thirty
flat-screened computers. We had to take classes just on computers and how to
use them correctly. Assignments and papers were to be turned in typed, not
hand-written like before. We started being forced to get a minimum number of
resources from the Internet for research papers, where before resources were
only obtained from books. When I finally got to high school, technology really
changed for me. I started taking a few classes that were totally online, and
that had no traditional classroom element whatsoever. I had textbooks that were
totally online, and did not even turn in paper copies of assignments anymore,
just submitted them online. All of my teachers had the newest SmartBoards
(which I never knew how to use until becoming a teacher education student!) and
most had a set of iPads dedicated just to their room. Many of my classes were
held in computer labs every day because all of our work was on the computer
now. I even had a math class that was totally on the computer! All of our
homework, quizzes, and tests were conducted online every day. It is almost
scary to look back and remember what we had in terms of technology fifteen
years ago and compare it to what we have today. Technology is only growing now,
and who knows what we will have in another fifteen years!
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