Monday, September 23, 2013

Web 2.0: Making Learning Possible for All Students

Flisti.com

Flisti is a fun, easy, tool that will be used by both the teacher and student. Flisti is new application that lets you create a very simple poll. No registration is required, and the link can easily be posted on a teacher/student website/blog, or embed it there. Using Flisti, it will allow students with learning disabilities to vote on things that interest them the most. Wanting to create the most beneficial classroom activities, it can help appeal to the students' interest making them want to be engaged and contribute. This tool will be used in a general education class to help those with disabilities.
All students will feel like they contributed, are doing something they want to do, as well as help develop knowledge about how to use WEB 2.0


My Scenerio:
 Samantha is in 4th grade and finds all independent classroom activities extremely boring. Samantha has ADHD which keeps her constantly moving and enables her from concentrating on material for a long period of time without a sense of engagement or pleasure in the subject. Samantha loves hands on activities, so Language Arts is one of her biggest enemy's.  Two days before the activity is suppose to take place, the teacher will upload the poll on her blog in the classroom and students will independently pick which activity they rather do. It will be done toward the end of the day and it will remain anonymous. Doing it this way students will have the opportunity to pick which on they really want to do without the pressure from other kids as well as get familiar using the teacher's blog.

URL:
http://flisti.com/

My personal Question:
http://flisti.com/56661/vote"><div


Monday, September 16, 2013

What is the Internet, Anway?



Watching The Today Show on "What is the Internet Anyway?" really made me laugh. I couldn't believe the host were having a full discussion on what an "@" sign stands for. It was hilarious that they seemed so puzzled by the idea of saying the URL for their own website.  It was amazing to me to see the host talk about the internet and not knowing how dramatically it would change our lives forever. Being that I was born in the early 90's I have always been exposed to computers and other technological devices but as we get older we are seen less as digital natives and more of a digital immigrant because of the rapid growth in technology. As a teacher we always have to keep up with the changing technology in order to reach and understand our kids perspective.

Web 2.0 and How it fits into a UDL Classroom


Technology is in everything we do, we have technology in our cars, homes, hands, and even our classrooms. Technology is not only apart of how we live, but it is the way that we live. Before I speak about Web 2.0 and how it effects our society, I want to start from the beginning where technology first started, Web 1.0. In the required reading for this weeks' module Web 2.0 A New Generation of Learners and Education by Dina Rosen and Charles Nelson it discuses and compares the ideas between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. Rosen and Nelson introduce Web 1.0 as a phase built in the early 90's, which "focused on presenting information." In a sense technology during the 1.0 phase was used by a limited amount of people "who had knowledge of Hypertext Markup Language or to those who had the technical know-how to use sophisticated publishing tools" (Nelson and Rosen, 2008) Unlike Web 2.0, Web 1.0 was used as a "read-only" but with advancing technology things dramatically changed in Web 2.0, such as enabling both presentation and participation.

Currently, we are living in a Web 2.0 world where knowledge is simply a click away. The web 2.0 revolution has effected everyone around the world from older adults who have become "digital immigrants" to young children who do not know anything different from the easy use and social sharing in technology, "digital natives." "Web 2.0 applications allow people to interact, collaborate, and share their creations (text, photo, audio, or video)with others: They allow all to participate in the conversation of learning and knowledge making." (Nelson and Rosen, 2008) With the consistency of always being able to collaborate and share creations, Web 2.0  can help reach a broad spectrum of students. Especially in an exceptional education class room, utilizing Web 2.0 creates the best UDL classroom for the simple fact that it can be used in multiple ways. Web 2.0 can help build social connections with the use of social networks. It can help visually show videos, blogs, and articles on different ways of learning a concept. It can help teachers view different methods and ways learners learn and how to teach them. Also it can help share methods that has worked with a broad range of students so teachers can reuse it and possibly alter it to make it better. Web 2.0 makes it easier to reach all students and gives them a chance to receive an equal opportunity at a more advanced education.

Although Web 2.0 is personally a great mechanism to advance a child's education especially in the exceptional education department there are also some drawbacks. Drawbacks can be sites like Wikipedia, where anyone can easily adjust the information and make up their own idea of what happened.