Thursday, March 30, 2023

EDUC 5313 Week 3 Blog Assignment


Chapter 6, Motivation to Learn, focuses on students remaining engaged and motivated in concepts being learned. It stresses how important it is for a learner to be interested in the topics they learn and continue to engage upon. Students who view their education as important, interesting, and worth their time are more likely to succeed than other students who do not. These learners who are engaged and motivated to learn set goals and will do whatever it takes to reach their goals. They also make sure to maintain these goals once reached as well. 

The ideas of Gura suggest that technology can aid in creativity and engagement. Through the use of different types of technology, students can further research topics and find other creative outlets to express their ideas. Students are able to use different platforms to study topics and gather evidence. They are able to share their work and ideas. Collaboration can happen through devices from wherever a student is and some platforms allow for live feedback. Technology gives students the opportunity for instant feedback. This helps students remain focused when researching and creating. When students are interested in a certain academic topic and are able to use technology to further foster their learning, they continue to remain motivated in their learning. Motivation is a mindset that affects our learning outcomes and when we value what we are learning, it leads to a positive mindset. As teachers, we need to make sure to create and foster a learning environment that promotes creative and motivating thinking in our students!


References

Gura, M. (2016). Make, learn, succeed: Building a culture of creativity in your school. Eugene, OR: ISTE. Part 2 (48 pages)

ISTE Standards for Students(2017). Retrieved from: https://www.iste.org/standards/iste-standards-for-students

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2018). How people learn II: Learners, Contexts, and cultures. Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press. http://doi.org/10.17226/24783.







Thursday, March 23, 2023

EDUC 5313 Week 2 Blog Assignment

The nature of Authentic Intellectual Work revolves around individuals applying knowledge to a concept in an original way. Authentic Intellectual Work involves not only being genuine with how you apply yourself, but also how you recognize and analyze all the details and data involved. This approach differs from the traditional way of doing things in education. Where as, students are adding more meaning to their learning, rather than just completing paper and pencil work. When students accomplish a required task, we move to the next task. This type of work, however, asks students to take what they have learned and apply it to the real world. 

Authentic Intellectual Work is characterized in three different ways: construction of knowledge, disciplined inquiry, and value beyond school. One of these characteristics that is very important to our student's education is the value beyond school. Too often, we are teaching to test and students are learning to test. They are not shown how to apply their knowledge outside of the classroom and how what they have learned applies to real world experiences. This characteristic is not only used to emphasize a topic that is interesting to the student, but the intellectual challenges that when met will have meaning to the students beyond what their teachers have required. These intellectual challenges that are introduced in a world outside of the classroom end up being more meaningful to the student than the challenges that are only introduced for the purpose of teaching (Newmann et al., 2007).

For example, when teaching a creative writing unit in ELA, the teacher could ask students to create a story about their favorite animal. The story must begin with a problem for the animal to be dealing with and the end with how the animal overcame the problem with a specific solution. Students are constructing knowledge through their details, while also writing about an animal that interests them. They demonstrate their working knowledge about problems and solutions, while making up a fun story from their own imaginations. 

Through the National Education Technology Plan update, technology can be integrated with the components of authenticity for this lesson by allowing students the chance to publish their work to a global audience despite where they may go to school. This opportunity expands growth possibilities and allows for personalized learning (Office of Educational Technology, 2018).

The Authentic Intellectual Work Framework is very similar to Kolb's deep dive into the element of authentic engagement based off of the Triple E Framework. We want our students to remain engaged, but motivated. By using technology we can engage our students and get them excited about using technology with the lesson. Students should be social and hands on. They can also post their work to the platform Seesaw and then comment their classmate's story by saying what their favorite part is. This activity could help support engagment  It is important to remember that students only remain on the designated platform for sharing their work. There are many other things on their devices that can distract them and it is important to model what platform you want the students to remain on. 

Newmann, F. M., King, B. M., & Carmichael, D. L. (2007). Authentic instruction and assessment: Common standards for rigor and relevance in teaching academic subjects. Retrieved March 23, 2023, from https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gD0kLtY7vaxgGS_L57xaE71-bX6-Hj3q/view

Office of Educational Technology. (2018, May 9). Learning: Engaging and Empowering Learning Through Technology. NETP. Retrieved March 23, 2023, from https://tech.ed.gov/netp/learning/ 

Thursday, March 9, 2023

EDUC 5313 Week 1 Blog Assignment

Hello!

My name is Brenda Rivera, welcome to my blog for EDUC 5313! Currently, I am a first grade teacher at a small school in Guymon, Oklahoma. We are located right in the middle of the Panhandle. I have held this position for the entirety of my five years of teaching. Last summer, I decided it was time for a change and working towards a masters degree was the first step. I knew if I wanted to move on to bigger career opportunities that I would need to go back to school. This summer I will complete my degree in less than a year and plan on relocating to Oklahoma City where I will continue to teach. I hope moving to the city will help open doors to other career opportunities in education. 

Creative Communicator 1.6a suggests that students choose the appropriate platforms and tools for meeting the desired objectives of their creation or communication. This standard could be used in a first grade science lesson involving the Oklahoma state standard, 1.ESS1.1.1: Patterns of the motion of the sun, moon, and stars in the sky can be observed, described, and predicted. Students could use their iPads to record themselves explain the patterns of moon phases and what these phases are. Platforms like Seesaw could be easily used in the elementary levels for recording. Students can work in partners and help each other explain in the recording what they have learned about the science standard and then send to the teacher for feedback. Through the Seesaw platform, teachers are able to safely communicate with their students. 

I believe the Seesaw app to be a quality platform for students to post their work and receive feedback. According to Kolb, a good educational app should provide developmentally appropriate guidance, like scaffolded feedback and has multiple forms of feedback. Teachers are able to provide feedback on Seesaw through written messages and by sending emojis as feedback. Instructions are able to be repeated and rephrased through the platform and the platform also promotes higher level thinking (Kolb, 2020). 

Kolb, L. (2020). Learning First, technology second in practice: New Strategies, research and tools for Student Success. International Society for Technology in Education. 

EDUC 5313 Week 5 Blog Assignment

Blended and fully online learning have grown in popularity in the K-12 grades and little research has been conducted on the central idea of ...