Texas Bluebonnet Writing Project Blog

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

BGBlogging is coming to BWP's Mid-Winter Conference!

Barbara Ganley, in her blog post, announced her intent to present at Bluebonnet Writing Project's Mid-Winter Conference on February 2, 2008. Thanks to Pete Smith we are excited to be able to host her. Folks, you don't get opportunities like this every day. Take advantage of it and plan to attend.  Stay tuned to this blog for more information as it comes available about this wonderful FREE professional development event.


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Friday, November 30, 2007

Why have a blog?

Lee Lefever and the folks at Common Craft are at it again.  Here is their latest video on the why's and have's of blogs.  Check it out (on TeacherTube if it is blocked at school):


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Tuesday, May 01, 2007

iPod Outlaws: Educational use of a concealed weapon

Let me follow up my previous "Outlaw iPod" post with just one way that these "disruptive" tools can be used for good and not just the dark side.

My knowledge trail (aka Personal Learning Network) on this started with The Savvy Technologist, curved around to Mark Wagner, bounced over to Theory.Isthereason, which in turn flipped me over to Betterdays and the iQuiz Library finally resting (temporarily) at the Mac Development Center. Clear as mud? Okay, then let's get started.

Everyone by now knows that the video iPod can store video and picture files (hence the "Cheater Cheater Pumpkin Eater" status). Well, it can also play games. And get this. It can play ... wait for it... educational games. Who would have guessed such a vile instrument of the Future Felons Club could be educational? Interested? And what if I said you could create them on your own for kids to download and utilize? Better?

Well, for 99 cents an iPod user can download iQuiz. iQuiz can run either pre-made quizzes from another source for free, or you can create your own quizzes for your students to download and use as review, pre and post tests, or whatever you can imagine. There is a free tool to create and download quizzes to your students' iPods. You can even store them online for other teachers and students to use (see below). As long as the answers can be multiple choice or true/false, you are good to go. Side note: Wouldn't this be a great way to offer parents the chance to download release tests to see what their kids are facing each year? Why not give it a try?

Download the iQuiz Maker software (Mac or PC) for free here.
Learn about the process to make your own quizzes here.
Follow this online tutorial (beginner and advanced version) to make quizzes here.
Store them or find new ones others have made in these online libraries here or here.

Then leave us some comments and tell us how it went. We can only learn if we share our successes and failures with each other. Better yet, tell us what you are using your iPods (ESL, recorded books, etc.).

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Friday, April 27, 2007

When you outlaw iPods, then only the outlaws will have iPods.

Or some version of this well known quote. Where am I going with this? Well...
Schools say iPods becoming tool for cheaters

Kemp said she does not have hard statistics on the phenomenon but said it is not unusual for schools to ban digital media players."I think it is becoming a national trend," she said. "We hope that each district will have a policy in place for technology -- it keeps a lot of the problems down."

This quote from a CNN article got me to thinking about us moving backwards instead of forwards. Why do we start throwing bans at things that we have yet to teach students about? Some things (like weapons, drugs, inappropriate clothing, etc) I understand. But if we are talking about an educational tool, how can we just make a statement like above begging for universal bans?


It reminds me of one of my son's animated movies where the beetle is blindly flying into the bug zapper and some of the other bugs are yelling at him, "Don't fly into the light!" And his only response was a dreamily, "I can't help it." Then ZZZZZZZZZ, and it was all over. Why do we act that way? We blindly fly into the light of reverse educational theory. We do everything we can to not prepare our kids for the future because, heaven forbid, they enjoy the tools they get to use?

Have we yet to offer ethics , values, and expectation courses for the use of these items? Can we not stop to think how we could utilize what students really enjoy using as an educational tool? Are there going to be cheaters still? Sure. But there always has been and always will be. Let me just share one word of advice in this area: MONITOR. If students know a teacher is going to go back and sit down at the desk to read a book or newspaper during a test, it doesn't matter what they use to cheat with because it will be easy.

Quit muttering the political rantings press so love to hear. Share, instead, stories of beneficial use and positive outcomes about turning what seems to be a negative into a very beneficial positive.

Consider this from Duke University (in the same article):

The music players proved to be invaluable for some courses, including music, engineering and sociology classes, said Tim Dodd, executive director of The Center for Academic Integrity at Duke. At Duke, incidents of cheating have declined over the past 10 years, largely because the community expects its students to have academic integrity, he said.

"Trying to fight the technology without a dialogue on values and expectations is a losing battle," Dodd said. "I think there's kind of a backdoor benefit here. As teachers are thinking about how technology has corrupted, they're also thinking about ways it can be used productively."

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Can Technology Affect Administrators?

I think so.

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

PD or not PD

Geoffrey Fletcher's commentary in the March, 2007 issue of THE Journal is a great read. His article focuses on professional development offered for technology integration, or the lack thereof. "Educators give lip service to professional development, but they don't spend money on it," one vendor is quoted as saying. Her thought as a vendor is that schools want the training for free like they do with textbooks. "They said textbook publishers give free training, [so] the technology guys should do the same," says one tech coordinator.

According to Fletcher's research from Market Data Retrieval, PD spending in the United States classrooms hovers between 5 to 8 cents for every dollar spent on technology. Recently, after increasing the demands on schools for improving student technology literacy, the federal government turned around and cut the educational technology budget in a huge way. So where are our priorities as a world power? In technology preparation and funding, I would say we have become a developing country.

Why do I bring this up? As educators we all know there is never enough PD on technology, and cost is but one of the factors. Time is another. Then again, for us to have time, it costs money to either offer stipends, comp time, or quality subs in the classroom to allow us to attend. No, the reason I bring this up is that the Long Range Plan for Technology adopted by TEA says that 30% of the total district budget on technology needs to be spent on professional development. That means thirty cents for every dollar spent on technology in your district will go toward offering (hopefully) quality PD with technology topics. The focus is a 24/7 PD offering to allow educators and administrators the chance to learn when it is convenient. What I see is districts either creating new positions for curriculum developers or stipends for tech savvy staff to develop it after hours.

Have you tried taking PD with this type of presentation? Maybe it is downloadable modules or online coursework with an asynchronous discussion setting. Or it could be a video online where you answer some questions at the end and then print out a certificate. ATPE has piloted a program on their site where you read articles online and then answer questions and then print a certificate. This is great for those who have to renew their certification every five years and need alternative ways for PD credits.

David Warlick and others have discussed a personal learning network (PLN). It is your own design in your area of interest where you challenge yourself through reading and interacting with your peers. You choose the sources as well as the times you interact. Blogs, RSS aggregators, and podcasts are important in this area to help you out. While there is no proof of your work here other than your improved performance as a professional, TEA still allows this style of PD to count toward your PD requirements for certificate renewal. While I have a lifetime certificate, I still choose to have a vast PLN made up of great educational thinkers like Will Richardson, Miguel Guhlin, David Warlick, Jennifer Wagner, Wes Fryer, Eddie, BWP bloggers, ..

I guess I am posting on this to flesh out my thoughts as to what is already going on as well as hopefully get feedback from others about their learning preferences in this arena. BWP offers top notch, in-person professional development. We are in the process of designing online PD offerings. How would you prefer to receive it? Do you need the deadlines of a time length, syllabus-based course offering? Or do you prefer the ability to log-in and out when it is convenient, work at your own pace, do some type of summative activity for proof, and then print your certificate of completion?

The one thing we cannot create for educators is time. We can make any PD offering you need. We can even offer it in differing formats. We just need to know what you find the most convenient and purposeful to you and how you would like to access it.

Be thankful Texas is finally taking the lead in long range planning in technology. The forethought to mandate funds (albeit not new money) toward professional development will only serve to benefit educators as a whole. If we are benefiting the teachers, the kids are going to reap the rewards. That is what this is all about, right?

Technology is a great tool. But, like most of the tools in my garage, if they are not used they are useless. We must provide the training necessary for teachers to efficiently and effectively utilize what the district is providing (and a few things you can get for free on the Internet).

By the way, with our move toward digital and online textbooks, are the tech companies going to change their feelings on providing free training to accompany adoptions? Or will they just jack their cost of the product and act like the training is free (like textbook companies do). Either way, it needs to be offered. I recently had this same thing happen with a new technology my district adopted. While it was provided free through the state technology materials adoption list, the company wanted $1500 a day for training. In a district my size (needing only 8 staff members trained) and limited funds anyway, I told them thanks but no thanks. Our district did not have that budgeted. I would do the best I could to figure it all out and train our staff. Is that the best method? No way. It is financial survival. But in the end common sense prevailed. The company realized that for us to get the full potential of the technology to be able to brag about it to others, they needed to provide the training using their own folks. So they did. For free. Just saying.

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Thursday, March 08, 2007

What on Google Earth?!


No, we have not been so overrun by Google that we are now renaming our planet...yet.

Thanks to a post by Will Richardson, I am excited to share with you a website dedicated to mapping (or offering maps of) literature; GoogleLit Trips. Studying the Odyssey? Great! Have your students visit the places traveled within the novel using FREE Google Earth. MacBeth? Covered. Aeneid? Good to go.

The only downside is there are only a few right now (targeting high school students), but the great news is that it is wide open for us to create our own and add to the literary experience for students.

The files (KML) do not seem that difficult to create, so if you feel lucky (or confident or skilled or just plain rebellious) map out your favorite piece of literature and share it with everyone. You can even upload images to go with each location as well as your own descriptions/explanations for each location. Just Google some phrases like KML tutorials or KML how to and find a tutorial you like to help get you started. Once you create a file, all you have to do is open Google Earth and then go to File and Open. Browse to your file and there you go.

Make sure you use this blog to share what you find, what you create, and best of all, the process you went through to get there. It is how we all learn.

Individually, we can read a book. Collectively, we can live it.

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Egg Roll, anyone?


Jennifer Wagner is at it again. This seemingly tireless educator is about to kick start a new collaborative, online project. This is for all of you who need some math and physics with a dash of technology tied into your curriculum.

It is (begin using loud, booming, announcer voice here) The Great Egg Roll 2007. Registration starts March 19th, so find a way to fit it into your lesson plans and realize that the hands-on application of skills will prepare your kids for TAKS better than drill and kill (not to mention they love it a whole lot more).

So here are her highlights:
Welcome to the 7th Annual Great Egg Roll Online Project sponsored by
TechnospudProjects.com!

Registration for this project will open on
March 19, 2007!

Each registering classroom needs to pair up with one other classroom at their school with whom they will be
rolling their eggs. Together, you will be gathering averages, adding measurements, and more!
(It does NOT need to be the same grade level, so feel free
to roll with your "buddy" classes!)

All eggs will need to be 2" plastic eggs filled with
3 Level Tablespoons of White (uncooked) Rice!! You are welcome to start
filling and gluing your eggs now for this project!

The project dates will be from
March 26 - April 13, 2007.

Jennifer Wagner
Technospud Projects Coordinator

If you are going to participate in this, leave a comment here so we can all follow your students and you through the process.

And if you want to know more about her other projects, visit her project site.

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Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Blogging is for grown-ups. Right?

During our Summer Institute we spent a lot of time blogging our thoughts and reflections about our experiences. We waxed poetically about our presentations and the work they entailed. We even used it to collaborate with those not in the immediate area of UTA (like me). So we know what we are talking about when we say blogging is just something kids do not fully understand. Right? Consider this:

Click on the image to get a better read of what it entails, but basically it is a mindmap about what blogging does for the author. These are just a few of the gems it lists:
I have increased my vocabulary.
You can think outside of the box.
It's like making your own books of thought.
You can smell the million dollar aroma of words.
It's like you are reading a blogging dictionary.
You paint stories in your mind.

And the list goes on very impressively. So what educator, purveyor of thought, wisdom-sharer of the masses could compile such a list? Eddie.

Yes, Eddie is the mastermind behind such an incredible graphic and thought provoking list. So, who is Eddie you might ask? I have very little idea. But what I do know is that he is in the 5th grade! His class blogs as well.

Take a look at what these ELEMENTARY students are doing with their individual and class blog spaces. There is no reason we cannot have such high expectations with our students as well.

Thanks Eddie!

By the way, I have my own blogging and podcasting project coming up. It is a full-bore pilot program to integrate the technologies into our school district. I wrote a grant. The superintendent offered to cover half the costs if the grant providers would cover the other half. He told me yesterday that I did not get what I wanted. I got more than I wanted. The grant providers offered to pay it all ($8000) as long as he kept his half available for me to use for expansion of the program. They see it taking off like crazy. It will be the largest grant they have ever given to any one person or group. I am honored that they have that much confidence in what I am wanting to do.

I plan to blog the process (here and on the school blog once created) that I go through including the costs and limitations of the equipment we buy and use. It will all be centered around an Apple server (oh the horror). Stay tuned. The first blog/podcast group out of the gate for us will be elementary special education (grades 3-5). Then, band has some awesome video podcasting ideas they have already started on. Journalism at the high school is also ready to take flight with Journalism I students and blogging. So this is going to be an awesome ride the next few months and into the summer. White Oak ISD will never be the same again.

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Monday, March 05, 2007

What do cereal, St. Patty's Day, Google Earth, and NASCAR have in common?


Sponsored by TechnospudProjects.com - PreSchool through Third Grade Students all over the world are welcome to join in the fun as we use the contents of a "General Mills Lucky Charms" 14 oz size box of cereal! Registration is now OPEN!! There will lots of great activities, as well as St. Patrick Ideas, which will help to make the week of March 12th through 16th, a fun filled -- EDUCATIONAL -- week!!

St. Patrick's Day -- Online Project 2007


If you happen to be in school next week (and you teach PK through 3rd), you might take a look at what Jennifer Wagner, fellow educator and NASCAR fan has working over at Technospud. It is a world-wide collaborative event that has over 600 educators and 12,000 students in it right now. Jennifer has everything laid out for you already from national standards to worksheets. You just need some kids and some Lucky Charms and get registered by Friday, March 9th (Awesome math and technology tie-in here!). So go on over there and register and join in the international fun. It is gauranteed to be magically delicious (lame slogan theft, I know).


Oh, the NASCAR fan part really has nothing to do with the project. I am just glad to find a female educator that enjoys watching cars go around in circles and run into each other as much as I do (or even at all).

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Tuesday, February 06, 2007

TCEA 2007 - David Warlick and Navigating the Digital Information Age

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I had the distinct pleasure of hearing David Warlick live for the first time today. I also had the opportunity to freak him out about half way through his presentation (more on this later).

David was discussing (and for me, clarifying) his belief that we need to quit discussing technology integration and begin discussing information literacy. You see, information literacy done right automatically draws in the technology based on the student need. Once again, it becomes student driven instead of teacher directed. For example:
Marco Torres is an innovative teacher. One day a student comes to him asking why her brother insists on speaking out against the global economy. She wants to know what is so important about the global economy that he is that worked up while in college. Marco says it would be a good idea for her to find out, and being a good teacher, he wants her to report her findings back to him. So she does. Boy does she ever. Watch this digital story about her findings (click on the video titled "Sweatshops"). Do you think she could have gotten her point across in an essay? Did he say go read a book and write a report?

There was enough NEW information created in 2003 to fill 37,000 Libraries of Congress buildings. Yes, we must teach our students to actively and effectively manipulate, navigate, and dissect this information.

As if our jobs are not hard enough, David points out a very interesting observation: “For the first time in history, our job as educators is to prepare our children for a future we cannot clearly describe.” Can we do that using the same methods we have been using for decades? And by "that" I mean PREPARE.

Another interesting observation David pointed out was that when the science community announced we are now one less planet, it took ONE minute for wikipedia to reflect the change. How long will it be before your textbooks reflect it? To steal a line from a chili company, "Well, that's too long."

How do the three R's fit into this information age? David suggests:
reading expands into exposing the truth
arithmetic expands into employing information
writing expands into expressing ideas compellingly

My overall views of this presentation are very high. I wish my admin had been there to hear it so they can see the dire importance of us making positive, affective changes in our ISD. I only hope they see my passion for improving the opportunities for our students through my actions.

Oh, and the freaking out David story. Well, I decided not to carry anything but my MacBook with me walking around so much. Since I was on the front row (Yes, I was a bow head) and David kept walking about ten feet in front of me, I decided I wanted a picture. Only camera I had was on the MacBook. So I loaded Photobooth and spun the laptop around and hit the mouse button. David was not quite ready for seeing himself live on a computer screen (I also read on his blog that he is not big on cameras anyway). He stopped cold mid-sentence and had to announce to the entire group that "this guy just threw me." (Sorry David. Thanks for taking it so well.) I talked to him after the presentation to say hi and thanks for the Class Blogmeister. He asked if I was going to be at the edublogger meet-up. I am not sure if it was nice small talk or he was plotting revenge for my laptop photo attempt. Either way, it will be nice to talk more with him. It was a learning experience, though. It was the first time I realized the iSight takes pics backwards. The TCEA logo was in reverse on my screen. Bummer. I am sure there is a trick to fix this somewhere.

I get to hear David again at the TEC-SIG luncheon Thursday, I think it is. Maybe I will have new batteries in my digital voice recorder by then. I saw Will Richardson sitting in on this session today. No, I didn't flip open the laptop and snag a photo. Maybe I can borrow one from one of my district buddies here. I can't wait to sit in on Will's keynote as well.

Now if I could just find Wesley Fryer around here somewhere to complete the trifecta...

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Mid-Winter Follow-Up - High School Students blog (verb)

The Blurb

The Blurb
The Blurb is a daily, weekly or sometimes monthly news show created and maintained by some seriously motivated students living in cyberspace! Check out our news and views regularly


This is the link to the blog that a group of high school kids are doing. It is very well written and interesting to read. They give their perspective in the form of a short post as well as a short podcast interviewing each other on the current event at hand. This is well worth the read/listen. Consider what your kids could do in their own classroom given this type of time and freedom to experiment.

PS - Notice how they do not use their real names or identifying comments in any fashion. Very safe. Great idea. Another way you can make up student names is to use an anagram generator. Students type in their names (full name gives more options), and the site generates a list of possible pseudonyms. Very cool (and funny).

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Monday, February 05, 2007

I'm at TCEA 2007

Just a quick note to say I am in Austin at the 2007 TCEA Conference. If any of you are down here in Austin leave a comment and I will try to catch up with you.

I will get a chance to hear David Warlick, Wesley Fryer, Will Richardson, Miguel Guhlin, and many more great education motivators. They keep me going in this very uphill battle.

I will also get a chance to meet up with a friend I made in Austin back in October while I was presenting at the Higher Ed Conference sponsored by the Dana Center. Dr. Walter Smith from Texas Tech heads a program called IV-STEM that allows pre-service teachers to work with students at universities around the world. They monitor the moon and keep track of their observations to share with other students on both sides of the hemisphere. Awesome idea. I am lucky to be a fly on the wall with this project to watch the interactions of all involved (which includes Japan and Australia). Sitting in on video conference calls has been a neat opportunity that I wish more had. Watching leaders at the university level create and implement programs to better the education preparation system is exciting to see.

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Friday, February 02, 2007

Mid-Winter Literacy Conference Presentation

This is the handout and presentation used in my Mid-Winter Literacy Conference session about the 2006-2020 Long Range Plan for Technology and the new literacy tools. Please understand there was a six minute video I created that preceded the presentation, so it fills in the blanks about the automotive comparison at the beginning of the slides. It is a 35 Meg vodcast download, so I am not sure I will be posting it here. Let me know if you are interested in seeing it, and I will try to find a way to make it work. You will need high-speed, though. Enjoy.

Mid-Winter Literacy Conference Handout-PDF



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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Open Source Law Proposal for State Agencies

I wonder why Texas hasn't gone here yet since we never seem to have any money for anything except slush funds for new business?

General Assembly

Proposed Bill No. 5299

January Session, 2007

LCO No. 782

Referred to Committee on Government Administration and Elections

Introduced by:

REP. O'BRIEN, 24th Dist.

AN ACT CONCERNING COMPUTER SOFTWARE PURCHASED BY STATE AGENCIES.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened:
That the general statutes be amended to require state agencies to consider the
availability of open source code software when purchasing, licensing or
procuring computer software, as an alternative to proprietary software, based
upon a comparison of costs and quality standards.
Statement of Purpose:
To require state agencies to consider the use of open source code software as an alternative to the use of proprietary software.

It seems like Connecticut is off to the right start, unlike Texas. I expect I will get way more information on how this will benefit public schools when I sit in at the TCEA conference with the new group I joined (thanks to a post by Miguel Guhlin) that is just now forming, the SOS-SIG. I am looking forward to hearing what others have done in this area. My push is piloting Linux boxes for my classroom using only open source and free Internet-based applications with each student using their own flash drives. While this is more than likely not an original idea, it would be a stretch for my ISD.

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Monday, November 13, 2006

A Change in Thought ... Missing a Change in Action

I know, I know. Even now you are thinking, “but Dad, wouldn’t just going to college be easier?” It might, yes. And depending on what you end up wanting to do, college might still be the best answer. But it might not. And I want to remind you that in my own experience, all of the “learning” I did in all of the college classrooms I’ve spent time in does not come close to the learning that I’ve done on my own for the simple reason that now I am learning with people who are just as (if not more) passionate to “know” as I am. And that is what I want for you, to connect to people and environments where your passions connect, and the expectation is that you learn together, not learn on your own. Where you are free to create your own curriculum, find your own teachers, and create your own assessments as they are relevant. Where you make decisions (and your teachers guide you in those decisions) as to what is relevant to know and what isn’t instead of someone deciding that for you. Where at the end of the day, you’ll look back and find that the vast majority of your effort has been time well spent, not time wasted.

Weblogg-ed » Dear Kids, You Don’t Have to Go to College

Is this scary or what? I love the idea since I am that type of learner. I have learned far more on my own directive than any other situation I have been placed in. Web 2.0 has offered me a connected on-going professional development I could not afford to get elsewhere. I choose to take advantage of the offerings for the benefit of my own learning and that of my students. It makes a difference because I want it to. This is the learning Will is talking about. Learning beyond the books. Learning what I feel necessary for my career and self-growth.

What would happen if our classrooms were set up that way now? Okay... Then what would happen if our classrooms were set up that way without all of the standardized testing and documenting and so on that we deal with day to day?

Would it not work to offer our students at least a portion of their day as a self-exploration period? Are we too pessimistic in the thought that our kids would not care and would just slack off? They probably would. At least in the beginning. They have never had these opportunities, so someone would have to get them on the right track. They could still be held accountable for the learning through some type of cumulative, collaborative project presented to the student body and a panel of experts on the subject. Yes, I know it would be expensive and time-consuming. Yes, it would be worth it. No, the state would not fund that type of program even though they demand that type of result through multiple choice questions.

Just some wonderings out loud. Feel free to comment. Or not.

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