1 / 77

Using Technology to Enhance Classroom Learning

Using Technology to Enhance Classroom Learning. Facilitated by Dr. Sophia Scott. Agenda. Understanding our students Technology & Learning Tips & Techniques for using PowerPoint technology to enhance learning in the classroom

lexiss
Download Presentation

Using Technology to Enhance Classroom Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Using Technology to Enhance Classroom Learning Facilitated by Dr. Sophia Scott

  2. Agenda • Understanding our students • Technology & Learning • Tips & Techniques for using PowerPoint technology to enhance learning in the classroom • Tips & Techniques for using Website technology to enhance learning in the classroom

  3. Understanding Our Students

  4. Pop Quiz What does this mean? ROTFL • Pneumonic for remembering the 5 plant cell types • Reserve Officers Training Florida • Record of True Foreign Languages • Rolling On The Floor Laughing

  5. Pop Quiz What do these chat acronyms stand for? • LOL • POS • GNSTDLTBBB • CUL8R

  6. Pop Quiz What do these emoticons mean? ;-) >:-(  ^5 (((((name))))  (::()::) @[_]~~ 

  7. Pop Quiz • Web site comparisons • Which of each pair of Web sites is designed for younger learners, which is designed for “us”?

  8. OURS http://www.sciencemag.org http://www.yahoo.com http://www.ask.com http://www.hgtv.com http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com THEIRS http://www.brainpop.com http://yahooligans.yahoo.com http://www.ajkids.com http://www.nick.com http://www.sikids.com Website comparisons

  9. Who are our Students? • Baby Boomers • TV generation • Typewriters • Memos • Gen X • Video games • Computers • E-mail • Net Gen • The Web • Mobile devices • Instant messenger • Online communities

  10. By age 21, The average person will have spent…. • 10,000 hours video games • 20,000 emails • 20,000 hours TV • 10,000 hours on a cell phone • Under 5,000 hours reading Prensky, 2003

  11. Children are exposed to technology for play and learning at a very young age

  12. Neuroplasticity • The brain reorganizes itself through life • Stimulation • Developmental experiences • Their brains are really “wired” differently

  13. The Net Generation… • Born in or after 1982 • Gravitate toward group activity • 8 out of 10 say “it’s cool to be smart” • Focused on grades and performance • Busy with extracurricular activities • Identify with parents’ values; feel close to parents • Respectful of social conventions and institutions • Fascination for new technologies • Racially and ethnically diverse Howe & Strauss, 2003

  14. Teen use of Web • 100% use it to search for information on colleges, careers & jobs • 74% use instant messaging as a major communication vehicle • 54% of students (7-12 grade) know more IM screen names than home phone numbers

  15. Teen use of Web for Communication • 81% e-mail friends & relatives • 70% instant message • 56% prefer the Internet over the telephone

  16. Why do teens go the Web? • Find new & exciting information • Learn more/better • For community • Show others what they can do • Be heard

  17. The Net Gen is Self-teaching – What does that mean for the classroom?

  18. Teens & Multi-tasking Online

  19. Technology & Learning

  20. Today’s Learners… • Digitally literate • Mobile • Always on • Experiential • Social (stay connected) Oblinger, 2004

  21. Hypertext minds: Qualities • Crave interactivity • Read visual images • Visual-spatial skills • Parallel processing • Inductive discovery • Fast response time Prensky, 2001

  22. Concerns… • Short attention span • Choose NOT to pay attention • Lack reflection • Lack text literacy • Lack identification of source quality

  23. NetGen learning preferences • Teams, peer-to-peer • Structure • Engagement & experience • Visual & kinesthetic • Things that matter Oblinger, 2004

  24. Students vs. Faculty Students Faculty MultitaskingSingle or limited tasks Pictures, sound, videoText Random accessLinear, logical, sequential Interactive & networkedIndependent & individual EngagingDisciplined SpontaneousDeliberate

  25. Generational Comparisons • Ctrl+Alt+Del is as basic as ABC • They don’t understand the “return” key • Computers fit into backpacks • They have always had a personal identification number • Photos are processed in under an hour • Gas has always been unleaded • Rogaine is available for the follicularly challenged

  26. Multiple Media Literacy • 2 million children have a personal website (ages 6-17) • 6 million will have one by the end of the year

  27. It is not about AGE… We live in a technologically enriched environment

  28. Compare yourself • Are you comfortable composing documents longhand? • Have you turned “remembering” over to a technology? • Are you connected? (Internet, cell phone) • Do you engage in more than one activity at a time? • Do you play computer or video games?

  29. What does the learning environment look like?

  30. Environments for learning • Every students learns all the time • Learning is in & out of classroom • Every setting can be a learning environment • Direct experience shapes individual understanding • Individuals learn by establishing & reworking patterns, relationships & connections • Change is stimulating

  31. The Big Question… How can teachers enable students to be successful in education?

  32. What students want in a learning environment… • Teacher to have an in-depth knowledge in their field • Faculty ability to use technology Effectively • Don’t overuse the technology

  33. Interaction Students learn from thinking… thinking is engaged by activity Junassen, 2003

  34. Balance Action Reflection Visual Text Social Individual Process Content Speed Deliberation Peer-to-peer Peer Review

  35. Engaging Learning Experiences Real Project Games Debate Emotional Engaging Voting Problem Solving Case Study Facilitated Discussion Q & A Lecture Passive Active

  36. Tips & Techniques for using PowerPoint technology to enhance learning in the classroom

  37. Preparing Presentations • Use a design template so you can focus on content • Use PowerPoint interactively • Outline the lecture using PowerPoint • Use text sparingly • The “Joy of Six” – max of six points & six words per point

  38. How to Design Effective PowerPoint Presentations

  39. Know Your Audience

  40. Organize the Content

  41. Font Styles Garamond Ariel Comic Sans Bookman Old Style Courier New CG Times Times New Roman

  42. Present in a Variety of Ways Use: • Tables • Charts • Shapes • Graphics • Stair steps • Don’t overuse Bullets

  43. Say it With Graphics

  44. Which slide communicates the clearest visual message?

  45.  Non-Verbals  Attire  7 Seconds  Organization  Eye Contact  Movement  Entry  Demeanor Your Visual Image

  46. Your Visual Image Non-Verbals 7 Seconds Eye Contact Entry Attire Organization Movement Demeanor

  47. Use Animation When Appropriate

More Related