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    Welcome back to campus, January 6, 2010!Prof. Dale Saylor using Classroom Presenter & digital ink in classProf. Dale Saylor using Classroom Presenter & digital ink in classProf. Dale Saylor using Classroom Presenter & inking in classProf. Pam Wash, SOE teaching in HEC with IWBProf. Pam Wash, SOE teaching in HEC with IWB
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  • Welcome to the inaugural issue of USC Upstate TLT News!Friday, October 2nd, 2009 No Comments »

    USC Upstate TLT News is a new monthly multi-media  newsletter prepared and published by the Department of Instructional Technology in the Division of Information Technology and Services.  (Check the About page to learn more).

    This newsletter is an outreach project of our area and focuses on teaching and learning with technology. USC Upstate TLT News contains information about pedagogical considerations, technical trends, and practical tips including regular features, tutorials, demos, and other resources.

    In each issue we will include a faculty feature highlighting the work and/or pedagogy of one of our own campus colleagues; original articles or links to news from the broader world of educational technology in higher education;  and a ‘tools and apps’ feature introducing  promising applications or ideas for a new use.

    Some navigation hints:

    • Always scroll down the page to check out the feature articles.
    • Note email and RSS subscribe opportunities
    • Check out other parts of the right side bar where we will share a monthly video development opportunity – Click on the YouTube icon on the lower right of the video to pop out to YouTube for viewing ,
    • Click on any photo in the gallery to visit our flickr photostream from around campus,
    • Click on the link provided to follow us on Twitter,
    • And be sure to visit our listing  of useful blogs, suggested sites, 
    • Check out our Google event calendar to keep up with upcoming opportunities.

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    November Faculty Feature:

    by Prof George Williams

    What happens when you have students show their work…to each other?

    Overview

    I’d like to follow up on a recent post at ProfHacker by Brian Croxall praising Mark Sample for explaining how and why one might share a Zotero library with anyone and everyone. Brian argues,

    “The more academics show their work—while they’re still working on it—the more we can learn, borrow, and remix from one another.”

    I’ve long been an advocate of opening up the work we do as teachers and scholars to a public audience, provided we’re the ones who decide when and what to share and under what conditions (I’m a big fan of Creative Commons licenses, for example). However, when it comes to what my students do in the classroom, I’ve been a little slow to embrace this philosophy. Only recently have I taken seriously the value of encouraging—and sometimes requiring—students to show their work to each other “while they’re still working on it.”

    Granted, as an English professor, I’ve almost always provided time for draft workshops in which students review each others’ essays, but I adopted a new strategy last year that works extremely well:

    Sticky notes!

    newsletter article image

    So far—knock on wood—I’ve had nothing but success with this method.

    Let’s say you want your students to answer a particular question and to be able to support their answer by, yes, showing their work. Here’s one way of doing that collaboratively, openly, and for the most part with affordable, low-tech tools.

    The required materials:

    • A whiteboard or chalkboard
    • Markers or chalk
    • A few pads of sticky notes
    • Students
    • Optional: Digital camera & online venue through which to share photos

    The process:

    1. At the very top of the board, in big letters, write the question under consideration.
    2. Draw a grid with open spaces into which the different possible answers will be placed.
    3. Make sure each student has a few sticky notes.
    4. On each sticky note, the student must write the following:
      • Name,
      • Answer,
      • Supporting reasons for answer.
    5. Each student then places their sticky notes on the board in the right locations.
    6. The class discusses the results.
    7. Optional: The instructor and/or students take digital pictures of the board and uploads them to a photo sharing site online.
    8. Optional: The instructor and/or students annotate the online digital pictures.
    9. Optional: The instructor and/or students return to the pictures to prepare for tests, for required essays, for subsequent discussions, or for any number of purposes.

    Some examples:

    As these examples suggest, this exercise works very well with “yes” or “no” questions where the two answers correspond to two different colors of sticky note. However, you could also use this method for more open-ended questions and for general group brainstorming. Note that this is not a method to use—I think—where there is a right answer to be distinguished from wrong answers.

    What I like about this method

    1. Students get it. Period. I always see light bulbs going off where before there had been none.
    2. It requires using the correct method for making an argument. You provide your opinion, but you also have to provide evidence that supports your opinion. If a student only has one of the 2 required elements, the sticky doesn’t get to stay on the board. Period. Everyone understands this by the end of the exercise, and so there’s no excuse for subsequently writing an essay that fails to use this method.
    3. It reveals understanding or lack thereof. The degree to which a student has–or hasn’t–processed what they should be learning is easy to assess with this method. You can’t hide that you’re not following what’s going on or that you’re not contributing to the discussion. If your sticky note is not up on the board, you’re intellectually absent. Maybe you need further explanation (perhaps during office hours), or maybe you just need to start taking the class more seriously.
    4. It requires concision. The sticky note is not big enough for beating around the bush or for flowery language intended to hide a lack of substantive comment.
    5. Even shy students who don’t like to speak up in class can participate.
    6. And finally, it enables peer modeling. When student A sees what students B, C, & D are capable of doing, the intellectual tasks required by the class suddenly seem a lot more manageable. And herein lies the value of sharing student work in the classroom.

    What I need to improve:

    1. Sticky notes aren’t good for the environment, are they? I’d like a greener way to accomplish this. Perhaps notecards and a corkboard. I do love the whiteboard, though.
    2. Understandably, some students have difficulty fitting the required information into the space provided by the sticky note, which makes the resulting pix tough to read sometimes. I could always start using bigger notes.
    3. The lighting in my classrooms is not great for taking pix of the whiteboard. Maybe I could d.i.y. some better lighting to illuminate the board.
    4. I need to require more often a followup assignment from this in-class exercise: for example, students wrote an essay based on our discussion of the two OpEd pieces (see link above). More of that sort of thing would be good.

    The punchline

    To remix—sorry, couldn’t resist—what Brian originally wrote:

    “The more students show their work—while they’re still working on it—the more they can learn, borrow, and remix from one another.”

    ________________________________________________________________________

    Thanks to Prof George Williams in LLC for sharing his work in our first ‘Faculty Feature’ article. We invite your submissions of suggestions for future Faculty Feature articles and examples of your own creative pedagogies for future columns.

    ________________________________________________________________________

    In the News:

    A few weeks ago, edutopia (available at:  www.edutopia.org) – the George Lucas Educational Foundation, released it’s ‘Top 10 Tips for Teaching with New Media”. According to their October 2 blog post inviting a final opportuinty to download the guide:

    “Edutopia exists to provide educators with the information and inspiration needed to create schools for the 21st century, and our new Ten Top Tips guide provides succinct tips on how you can use the latest technologies to prepare your students for success.”

    Visit the site to get the guide and for a large collection of resources and information pertaining to  the foundation’s Core Concepts (available at: www.edutopia.org/topic-overview) including

    • Comprehensive Assessment,
    • Teacher Development,
    • Technology Integration,
    • Social and Emotional Learning,
    • Project Learning, and
    • Integrated Studies.

    ________________________________________________________________________

    November’s Tool Feature

    This month’s tool feature will be a little different from future columns as we remind you of the opportuinty to learn about tools and apps through our Programs on Demand workshops.  These portable customizable workshops are available at flexible times that you decide and can be scheduled for a few people or a large group, for faculty, staff and/or students.  To schedule a session, just email us.
    Programs on Demand Tools and Apps topics include:

    • Twitter
    • iGoogle
    • Google docs
    • Google chat
    • Google calendar (pretty much anything Google!)
    • Zotero
    • Diigo
    • Jing
    • Etherpad
    • Creately
    • Wallwisher
    • Spezify
    • xtranormal
    • OneNote
    • VoiceThread
    • PhotoStory
    • flickr
    • Others you choose!