Sunday, December 18, 2016

Aligning Digital Citizenship to Your Units of Inquiry

How can teachers incorporate digital citizenship instruction without overflowing their already full glass?

I get it...
It's just One. More. Thing. in the eyes of a teacher. Just one more lesson. Just one more box to check. Just one skill to track and monitor. Digital citizenship, it is something we must do both for the mental health of our students, as well as the digital literacy graduation requirements many schools are being asked to adjust for.

Image Source, ISTE.org
I am currently on the lead team for designing a digital citizenship program for our building, which will be pushing out a BYOD 1-1 program next year. One thing we quickly realized is that most teachers are not equipped with a working understanding of digital citizenship. Our very first task quickly became centered around educating our teachers on digital citizenship.

In regards to curriculum for students, we have chosen to use Common Sense Media's free digital citizenship PK-5 curriculum as our foundation. Common Sense has designed some easy, low-prep, high engagement lesson plans that cover all of Mike Ribbel's 9 elements of digital citizenship.

Now, for the hard part...the how. After much discussion, we determined our best course of action was to align the lessons to the IB transdisciplinary themes, providing an open-ended framework for teachers to incorporate the lessons as they apply to their Unit of Inquiry. We are currently in the process of creating a roadmap (or google doc spreadsheet) for teachers to pull from. Instead of simply following Commons Sense Media's scope and sequence, we are working to embed the lessons into our current learning activities and experiences to design parallels and real world applications. 


For example, we have identified the following lessons from Common Sense to align with How we express ourselves:


We shall see where this new journey takes us and how it impacts our students.

Earlier this year, I wrote a reflection on a discussion I had with a colleague on the importance of digital citizenship and why teachers should not ignore technology and ban it from their classrooms, but embrace it, learn about it, and use it as a tool of creation rather than a tool of consumption. You can read it here: When Digital Citizenship Really Matters

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Flat Walls, Big Ideas

How does your class connect to enhance your current unit of inquiry or learning cycle?

Engagement is a great indicator of teacher success. When student interest is piqued, students begin generating their own ideas and questions, solving their own inquiries and sharing their learning with others. One way I seek to engage my students is by flattening our classroom walls and working with other classrooms. A professional development course I am currently taking through The International Baccalaureate Organization challenges its participants to reach out and find a project or connect with another classroom. Here is a list of a few of my favorite activities that connect my students with the world around us and engage my 2nd graders in conversations outside of our classroom.

Global Read Aloud
The Global Read Aloud uses "one book to connect the world". Every October, The GRA kicks off with a list of books classrooms can read. Throughout the 6 week GRA, classrooms around the globe connect with each other to read, share, discuss and reflect upon the book they are reading through a variety of apps and web 2.0 tools. The GRA Twitter hashtag is #GRA16 (or whatever the current year is). Using Twitter, teachers can connect with other educators and plan ongoing collaboration or live digital meetups through apps like todaysmeet, voicethread, padlet, or thinglink. Here are a few of our collaborations from previous GRA's:

GRA 2014, Edward Tulane
GRA 2013, Marty McGuire

ePals
ePals is a great platform that connects classrooms around the world through projects, conversations, and general connections. Teachers signup via their interests and setup learning experiences with other classrooms.

#comments4kids
For the blogging classroom, using the hashtag #comments4kids can lead you to other teachers that are looking for blogging connections, as well as allowing your students to comment on other classroom blogs.

How does your classroom connect? I would love to explore a few new projects and connection activities.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Partnerships Really ARE the Best! ClassDojo and Night Zookeeper

This week, ClassDojo and Night Zookeeper partnered up using Class Dojo's Big Idea series to share resources on creative writing.

I love to write! My "before I know what I want to be when I grow up" degree was in journalism. I spent a few years as a newspaper editor. I cranked out articles and edited the articles of my team. The writing part of the job was great! 

However, TEACHING writing to young children is a whole different story. Teaching writing is just simply hard. I find it to be the hardest subject to teach. Therefore, I will gather up all the plentiful resources you can throw at me and use them until the cows come home. And that's just what I did this week when ClassDojo introduced me to the Night Zookeeper.


PART 1
My 2nd graders sat on the carpet, lights off, eyes on the whiteboard, watching video #1, Creating a Character. We then came back to our desks and eagerly followed the video suggestions, creating a character that had skills and abilities, likes and dislikes, a look, a feel...a character.


Our planning map for creating our character using the Night Zookeeper's suggestions.

PART 2
Next, we headed back to the carpet, turned the lights out, and watched as the Night Zookeeper series explained to us how to use our 5 senses to create a setting in video #2, Creating a Place. It was amazing. Somehow, my kids went back to their seats and came up with phrases like "It smelled like 1,000 year-old rotten eggs..." and "The sticky candy cane floor crunched loudly under her feet." We shared, we cheered for the great ones and helped the ones almost there get something down.

Our planning map for creating a setting using the suggestions from the 2nd Night Zookeeper video.

PART 3
The next day, we went on to add details to our story courtesy of the Night Zookeepers lesson #3, Creating Obstacles. We created the problems and tried to give specifics to aid in our creative writing piece. It started to get tough. We lost a little focus. We paused. We decided to go back to the carpet and watch the video again for inspiration. We had found our groove! We were back at it. Just take a look at some of our final work.




I will let you head over to watch the final video in the series, "Creating an Ending". I want to hear what you thought of these great teaching aids. 
  • Did they inspire your students? 
  • Did they help give you some direction in your writing lessons? 
  • Will you use them again when you review creative writing? 
My class would love to see the work your students created after watching the videos. Please share!

Monday, December 5, 2016

Reflections of an IB Teacher on Reflecting

This month, I am participating in an online International Baccalaureate class for global educators. We are improving upon our global education skills through activities that support the following:
  • collaboration
  • authentic learning activities
  • digital citizenship
  • and global connectedness

I have been asked to do a little reflecting along the way, a practice I do very well as a think-a-loud, in the shower (where all my brilliant thoughts occur) or at 2:00 am when I can't sleep. Blogging about my reflections has been on my goal list for years. It was even on my district performance plan last year.
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Thus far in my teaching career, I have mostly used blogs to connect my students with other classrooms via global projects. For years I have attempted to use blogs to be a reflective teacher, an educator that finds the time to share her learning and reach out to those that will help me grow. I have not had as much success in this area as I would like. I think it is because I put forth so much effort into getting my students connected, that I just "squeeze in" the time to connect myself beyond classroom projects. Twitter (follow me @crosbyscoolcats) has been a better tool for me in terms of connecting. Perhaps it's because everyone is just "squeezing in" 140 characters. The chat or comment is quick and to the point. The resources are archived and you can go back to your Storify at any time.
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A resource that was provided to us included, "How to Craft a Blog Post - 10 Crucial Points to Pause" by Darren Rowse. I find his thoughts on post promotion to be a helpful nudge in the right direction. Perhaps one of the reasons I am more apt to connect with and for my students is because I have a greater buy-in and response from other classrooms. I know I should Tweet and share my blog posts more often, but it feels a little too narcissistic to me to do so, at least to do it more than once or twice...
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So, perhaps I set a "share" number and aim to share my posts a little more often, with comfort. I think I may also consider sharing posts that I consider to be a "old" with the idea that they could actually be new learning for others.

I am curious as to how other educators share their blogs. I would love your feedback...
  • Do you share them during chats? 
  • Are they distributed via your school's professional learning department or PLN in your building? 
  • What advice can you share with me in terms of growing professionally through my blog beyond enhanced classroom learning experiences? 

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Today I Traveled Around the World in 45 Minutes

ISTE, Day 1


ISTE Denver, 2016
Woohoo! Once every few years I gather with my tribe to learn, share, grow, connect and geek out at The International Society for Technology in Education Conference. A few goals I have established for myself for this conference include:
  1. To connect face-to-face with 5 new educators that I can work with on global projects this upcoming school year.
  2. Gather at least 3 new global resources to incorporate into our Units of Inquiry.
My first night, Sunday night, offered a great poster session on global projects and collaboration. Perfect!

After just a few short hours I have already connected with a like-minded educator from Australia. Bonus points, as she also teaches 2nd grade (or Year 2). I have also gathered a number of resources that I would like to pursue including


  • MyHero.com, a project designed to help kids celebrate the best in others. This project resource fits nicely into our Unit of Inquiry into influential people. My students create PSA's using Green Screen tech on an influential person they research. We might be able to submit our projects to MyHero.com.
  • KivaU.org, an organization designed to support financial literacy education and impact a small business startup. This organization aligns not only with our Unit of Inquiry into financial resources, but supports my classroom economy system.


I am looking forward to exploring these resources. Watch for updates on how I incorporated these resources into my classroom!

Monday, April 18, 2016

When Digital Citizenship Really Matters

Recently, I had a valuable and insightful conversation on social media with a colleague regarding the very real and serious struggles in high schools when technology is abused by their student body. 

The teacher, whom I hold in the highest regard, had reached her limit with students abusing their
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privilege to carry a small computer around with them every day. She discussed very serious incidents that broke the schools honor code, students using apps that allowed for intimidation, bullying and slandering of others, students making unethical choices recording others against their knowledge or students simply tuning out of the world right in front of them. These are problems we all see, in and out of the classroom. My colleague had reached her limit and decided to ban access to students using BYOD in her classroom for the sake of those being hurt. Her frustration level had been reached and her response was her final resort in trying to manage what she felt was an unmanageable situation. I found her response understandable, but unfortunate that this is what it had come to.

Before I go on, I want to make it clear that I don't believe just a few teachers can change the way students handle technology, so my colleagues response to ban student devices is a common one. Our conversation led us to the point that I wish more school leadership would make a priority; school communities need to embrace the educator's responsibility to teach digital citizenship, or the appropriate and responsible behavior we should use when accessing tech. I believe this should be done across curriculum's, not in isolation in a "tech class".  This problem needs to be solved through school climate and culture, with strong leadership guiding staff on the implementation and practicality of teaching such skills. These skills should be taught with the same significance that we teach other social skills in school. These skills should be prioritized with the same importance that all other lessons are taught. These students future jobs rely on their ability to communicate with digital etiquette and competence across cultures.

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Teaching 2nd grade, I feel I am an a great position to shape a child's mind on the responsibilities and etiquette required of anyone accessing content online. In my classroom, we create, we publish, we blog, and we share. We follow three simple rules before hitting that post button, or saving that video reflection.

1. Did I represent myself as a smart 2nd grader, spelling or speaking appropriately, using proper grammar and punctuation?
2. Did my contribution add something important or have a purpose? 
3. What would my parents think about what I have said or created?

Those guidelines sounds so simple, right? But they are not. Enforcing those 3 guidelines and checking the boxes forces my students to reflect, something even most adults don't do before hitting send. My students have such a desire to be seen as responsible, intelligent and capable, that these three small guidelines carry over into their face-to-face interactions as well. And THAT is the goal, isn't it? That students understand our online interactions are really the same as our face-to-face interactions.
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If my colleagues high school students had grown up with a culture that respected technology for the powerful learning tool it is, and understood the weapon of mass destruction it has the potential to be, would her students still behave in the same irresponsible manner? If my little learners continue to receive the same curricular instruction in digital citizenship, will my high school colleague reap the benefits of our lessons?

Please tell me how has your school implemented digital citizenship and what is your role in implementing digital citizenship skills?

For those looking on more information on digital citizenship, I would recommend looking at Mike Ribble's Nine Themes of Digital Citizenship