M3:
Molly Brooke Threadgill
·
URLs:
What do URLs tell
you/students about web sites?
“If someone gives you a
URL, very often you can tell what and where it is by reading its parts.”
(Doering & Roblyer, 2013, p. 216) Every URL has a “domain designator” and
you can differentiate certain kinds of sites from others just by looking at the
last 3 letters (e.g. .gov, .org, .edu, .com, .net etc.).
·
Search
Engines: How can learning to use
search engines help you/students find better information?
In my M2 blog post I
wrote extensively about how valuable and helpful Google has been to me as a
teacher. Major advantages of using a search engine are that often times, like
with Google, you can type in the word Sunflower in the search box and instantly
everything relating to Sunflowers magically appears on your screen. You can
toggle through the different parts of Google- Google Images, Google News,
Google Shopping, Google Scholar, Google Videos etc.- without typing the word in
again and see every possible option for searching for Sunflowers. Teaching your
students how to to research within a search engine is so important!
·
Internet
Tool: Choose one Internet Tool
(in the section beginning on p. 223) and discuss how you might use it in a
classroom.
As an art teacher I see the
benefit and am eager to begin using an e-Portfolio site such as Artsonia to have an up-to-date way for
parents to see what we’ve been doing in art each day! I usually have to keep
all my students’ art work until the end of the year so I can pick each student’s
best piece(s) for our year-end art shows. Having something like this would be a
wonderful way to parent’s to engage and ask their children specific questions
about what’s been going on in art! Any way to strike up conversation between
parents & children is a HUGE plus in my book! Also, the student’s could
learn how to digitally photograph and upload their work to the site- very very
cool too!
·
Web-Based
Lesson: Discuss and link to a web
site where students could access or you could create a web-based lesson.
(discussed in Chapter 8)
Collaborative projects
are beneficial & popular in education today. Google Docs or also even Wikispaces would be sites teachers could use
to help with web-based lessons. They could do the initial lesson & give the
assignment on Wikispaces and then the students could use Google Docs to help
them complete the project together!
·
Favorite
Web Sites: Finally,
pick two web sites that you feel are your favorite. Post the web sites and talk
about why they will be beneficial to teachers and/or students. Use at least two references to chapter 7 and 8
content (for each) that makes
these web sites effective resources.
I don't know why the formatting is so funky on this blog post- my apologies!
ReplyDeleteAn e-portfolio is a really cool idea!
ReplyDeleteGoogle sometimes gets a bad reputation, but like you said there are so many ways that students can use Google to find information. It is important to teach them how to navigate within a search engine. I also used Google as an example in the "search engine" section of my post, especially focusing on Google Scholar. I am amazed at just how much Google has to offer.
ReplyDeleteI like Google Docs. It would be really handy for a group project where the individual students could work from home. I used it in a class at UAB and it worked great.
ReplyDelete