Transcript
Page 1: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Designing and Managing Collaborative Projects:Using Google Tools to Integrate Geography, Science and The Arts

Networked Learninghttp://www.thenetworkedlearner.comThomas Cooper, The Walker School

Networked Learning 2010

Page 2: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Where to find this informationThe Networked Learner Wikihttp://thenetworkedlearner.wikispaces.com

Networked Learning 2010

Page 3: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Teachers as Designers• Instill a Desire for Exploration• Customize Based on Student Interests• Teach How to Identify Problems• Do Research• Collect and Analyze Data Objectively• Connect and Collaborate with Others• Communicate Our Results• Increase Global Awareness • Develop Character, Encourage Citizenship

Networked Learning 2010

Page 4: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Five Mindshttp://www.howardgardner.com/http://www.thinkers50.com/book_extracts/gardner.pdf

• Disciplined Mind• Synthesizing Mind• Creating Mind• Respectful Mind• Ethical Mind

Networked Learning 2010

Page 5: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Application to Five Minds• Disciplined Mind: Asks students to explore their world, ask thoughtful

questions, to look at a problem and collect data on it over a long period of time in order to gain an in depth understanding of the issue.

• Synthesizing Mind: Asks students to take information from various text, interviews and other data sources, including other disciplines, and to evaluate it objectively, in order to get the big picture.

• Creating Mind: Ask students to look at problems in different ways in order to develop unconventional solutions to solve a problem.

• Respectful Mind: Asks students to be globally aware and to welcome differences, and to work effectively with others in different places and from different cultures.

• Ethical Mind: Ask students to good citizens, to look beyond our own self interest and see how are education and work can serve to improve our community.

Networked Learning 2010

Page 6: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Good Games, Good Learning

• Create an Identity• Explore New Territory• Solve Problems in Alternative

Ways• Lower Risk Taking• Require Interaction,

Specialization• Allow for Customization• Have Situated Meaning• Require Performance Before

CompetenceNetworked Learning 2010

Page 7: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

The Video Game Learning Cycle:

Hypothesize

Probe the World

Get a ReactionReflect on the Results

Re-probe to Get Better Results

Networked Learning 2010The Kids are Alright (Beck and Wade 2006)

Page 8: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Gaming Can Save the Worldhttp://www.ted.com/talks/jane_mcgonigal_gaming_can_make_a_better_world.html

• Researcher at the Institute of the Future in Palo Alto, CA

• Wants to build games that teach us how to solve the problems of the next century.

• To build games that inspire use to be inventive, to collaborate and cooperate.

• Example: Urgent Evoke http://www.urgentevoke.com/

Networked Learning 2010

Page 9: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Clean Watershedshttp://cleanwatersheds.wikispaces.com

 

Networked Learning 2010

Page 10: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Project Overview:• Focus: Environmental Science and Ecology• Other Disciplines: Geography, Technology,

Health • Suggested Age: 5th – College• Time: 1 Field Day, 2 Class Days, 2 Tech Days• Equipment: GPS Unit, Computers, High-

Speed Internet, Water Quality Test Kit• Software: Google Earth 5.0, Wikispaces

Networked Learning 2010

Page 11: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Doorways to Design

Networked Learning 2010

Established Goals or Content

Standards

An Important Topic or Content An Important

Skill or Process

A Significant Test

A Key Text or Resource

A Favorite Activity or

Familiar Unit

Design TemplateStage 1 – Desired Results

State 2 – Assessment EvidenceStage 3 – Learning Plan

Wiggins and McTighe (2005)

Page 12: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

THE LEARNING PROCESS

Networked Learning 2010

Page 13: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Exploration:

Networked Learning 2010

Students can use Google Earth to explore their town. Have the locate the school and surrounding water sources. Trace the school’s water back to its source. Identify any businesses that might contribute to various forms of water pollution. Students can use the path tool and placemark balloons to document this process. Students can use Earth’s measuring tools to understand how far away they these places are. Students can also look at how geology affects the movement of water, such as in the case of run-off from farms or other pollution sources.

Page 14: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Problem Identification:

Networked Learning 2010

Students can use Google News to identify news articles about the subject then mark known locations in the Google Earth layer they are constructing. Problems are never isolated. Students can discuss and identify situations that might contribute to the main issue. Students can concept map the issue in Google Earth. They can use balloons to geolocate information and use the path tool or balloons with arrows icons to show the relationship between balloons.

Page 15: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Walker Students Investigated Nitrates from Golf Courses

Networked Learning 2010

Page 16: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Customization:

Networked Learning 2010

Develop projects that have broad themes, but allow for specific choices to reflect student interests. Poll students about what articles they found interesting during the research phase. Put students in groups with similar interests. You can use a Google Spreadsheets to track your groups. Embed the spreadsheet in your project site so that participants know who is studying what issue. Groups in other participating schools can see who is studying a similar project and ask each other questions. Students can use Google Alerts to keep up to date on new developments from Google News, or you can set up alerts to notify you when student groups post new information to their blog.

Page 17: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Conduct Research on Contamination Sites (Google Earth Search on Golf Courses)

1. Golf Courses (N, P, K)

2. Concrete Plants (Ca, Mg)

3. Paper Plants (Cl)4. Coal Plants (S, Hg)5. Pig and Cattle

Farms (N)6. Metal Fabrication

(Fe, Mn, Cu)

Searches

Networked Learning 2010

Page 18: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Collect Data Continually:

Networked Learning 2010

Task students with collecting data from a number of different sources. Also ask the to collect data over time. Students can conduct interviews of company officials or people affected by the problem. Student can use GPS units to mark the point of test sites that are remote and hard to find so that repeated testing on an issues is done in the same location each time. Students can use a video camera do document the environmental status of the site before notifying officials. Recently CENS is teaching teachers how to add sensors to smart phones and program them to collect data on the environment.

Page 19: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Center for Embedding Networked Censing (CENS) http://research.cens.ucla.edu/http://urban.cens.ucla.edu/

Networked Learning 2010

Page 20: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Data Analysis:

Networked Learning 2010

Student can use a Google form during lab experiments to upload data to Google Docs. They can be stored in a Google spreadsheet and then embedded on a Google project site page so that data can be shared. Charts can be made from school data, or as your database is added to by other schools, students can look at how their results differ by geographic location or by type of industry or type of pollutant.

Page 21: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Post Data to Share(Google Forms)

Networked Learning 2010

Page 22: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Tools Can Provide Immediate Results(Google Forms)

Networked Learning 2010

Page 23: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Connect and Collaborate:

Networked Learning 2010

It is important for our students to work with other in different geographic locations. Students need practice entering into social discourse. A teacher can set up an extra Announcement page in a Google Site that can be used by students to ask questions of each other. These students could be in different classes in the same school or preferably working on the same problem in different schools. The teacher can set up collaboration groups using a Google Spreadsheet and then embedding it in a Google Site page.

Page 24: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Communicate Your Results:

Networked Learning 2010

Students can use Google Docs to write reports on their findings. They can share this document with the people they interview so that they can check the students facts and see what the student is saying about the issue. They can share the document with the teacher so that they can give comments before the paper is due. Students can have their document go through a peer review process by collaborating with your peers in other classes or other schools. Teach students to 1) give praise for what was done right, 2) make a suggestion where there could be improvement, and 3) offer possible solutions for the improvement.

Page 25: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Increase Global Awareness:

Networked Learning 2010

Design projects to be collaborative. Ask yourself how the project would be different in another location. Results can vary by geology, water availability, types of industry, laws, and cultural practices. Encourage other schools to participate and add their information to your site and collaborative layer. Make friends in the process.

Page 26: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Encourage Citizenship:

Networked Learning 2010

Develop a plan of action to fix a problem. Don’t stop a collecting and posting the data in your layer. Create a Google Doc for you plan and share it with your students have them talk about what the data means and how they could go about fixing the problem. As teachers we want to design projects that meet our curriculum. We want to have the project outlined and tested before the students start. They feel left out of the process and are more hesitant to do the work. This is a great place to get the students involved. You can review the doc as a collaborator and make sure the project is manageable. Some ideas are cleanup, writing letters to officials, or educational campaigns.

Page 27: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

SCALE PROJECTS FOR OTHER DIVISIONS

Networked Learning 2010

Page 28: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Google Earth Professional Learning Community(college professionals)http://geplc.wikispaces.com/

Networked Learning 2010

Thomas.Cooper
Page 29: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Our Town Project(elementary students)http://sites.google.com/site/exploreourtownproject/

Networked Learning 2010

Page 30: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Our Town Lessons

Networked Learning 2010

Start simple but keep the learning process you want in mind. You can simplify a complex project for younger students while still following a basic research model. The Our Town Project asks student to explore their town, identify problems, collect and share data, promote global awareness and engage in digital citizenship and teach character development and ethics.

Work Together by Houghton Mifflin

Page 31: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Other Project Examples• Expedition Lit Trips (English, history, explorers) • Walk on the Wild Side (science, biology and

environmental science)• First Light (astronomy, telescope tech)• Land of Hope (social studies, immigration)• Our Lost Children (social studies, marginalized

children)• Fueling America (science, alternative energy tech)• Poetry of Place (English, history, poetry, art)

Networked Learning 2010

Page 32: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Open Room in Elluminate for Collaboration with Colleagues http://www.elluminate.com/academic_edition.jsp

Networked Learning 2010

The Walker has an open room in Elluminate that you can sign up and use free of charge if you want to connect with others. To schedule use of the room, contact Thomas Cooper at [email protected]. If you end up using the room frequently, was ask that you join the our school cooperative. Details at http://thenetworkedlearner.wikispaces.com/Elluminate+Schools

Page 33: C:\Fakepath\Designing And Managing Collaborative Projects

Online Tutorials in Elluminate

• Day: Tuesday• Time: 4 – 5 pm EST• Where: Walker Elluminate Room• Session Link:

https://sas.elluminate.com/m.jnlp?password=M.8B942458B63AE7F3ADFA8A510BD0DE&sid=2009238

• Coordinators: Thomas Cooper, Alice Barr

Networked Learning 2010


Top Related