I found this webpage that has numerous apps for all ages, aiding in organizational skills, time management, prioritizing, etc. for adults with ADHD. But. these could definitely be used for the unorganized college student!
check it out: http://www.udotherest.com/?MID=V012164&SID=1120763&PID=84745438&wt.mc_id=1120763
Monday, October 22, 2012
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Blog #6- SMARTboard
Technology becomes more and more prevalent in our lives daily! It really revolutionizes the idea of UDL! After Monday's demonstration of the multiple uses of the SMARTboard, I wonder why it's not being used more in classrooms. I know that many schools don't have the funding to have SMARTboards in their classrooms, therefore, when classes do have a SMARTboard I think it's such a waiste if it is not used to its full potential. I have only observed the SMARTboard being used minimally: as a projector when used with the ELMO, and to display headings and topics for students to copy from. There have a been a few instances that students watch video demonstrations from Brain Pop, and math websites, but again very limited usage.
I wonder if it has to do with a lack of training. I mean, I know if I didn't have the full demonstration we had in class, I wouldn't have any idea of the potential SMARTboard has! I think every teacher, or anyone for that matter, that has the chance to use a SMARTboard, should be fully aware of all its features. If they can't attend training, we have discovered that in Smart Notebook there is a tutorial. I'm also sure that there are you tube videos; what ever the mode, training/tutorial is a must!
I was really blown away by what the SMARTboard has to offer. I immediately thought to all my students. typically developing and those with special needs, and the concept of UDL. First of all, lets talk about engagement! Teachers can keep their students attention by all of the "tricks" they can incorporate in their lessons. I'm still blown away by the "tunnel" trick, and being able to link objects to the internet or other pages within the presentation. All of these features help differentiate for different types of learners; it caters to everyone's learning style. A lesson can incorporate visual text which the teacher or the students can write in. It can incorporate video clips, and interactive websites. It can include online games as a review. It can also offer read-alouds, and even voice recordings. Different colors can be used, which is visually stimulating, and helps teachers organize different concepts within a lesson. Being able to have a screen shade helps build anticipation, but also helps students focus on one concept at a time. It really helps incorporate creativity into lessons, which I find is really lacking in many classrooms.
I really like that the SMARTboard is not only an instructional tool, but also an adaptive tool. It really helps include all students in lessons, regardless of their ability. Students who have fine motor issues can benefit from simple clicks, drag and drop features, and even using a tennis ball, or even their head, in place of a pen! This technology would be great for a student like Sarah who has Ataxic Cerebral Palsy, and uses a wheelchair. She can interact in classroom activities by coming up to the board and answering questions with ease. The screen that the students are working on can be lowered so all the students, despite if they are in a wheelchair or just not as tall as other students, can have access to the board. For a student like Jack who has fine motor issues this would be great also! It's also engaging technology, which he enjoys, and interactive graphic organizers can created for him, that the entire class can benefit from, and can create collaboratively. Audible explanations can even be added in as links for him incase he needs a reminder when reviewing on his own. The best part is any presentation can be saved and looked back at, which is a great teaching tool!
Friday, October 12, 2012
Blog # 5- Web 2.0 Tools
In the classroom I am teaching in now, I have only experienced using a Smart board and an ELMO. These have been very useful technological tools to project worksheets on the board, create power points, and display pictures and videos to my students.
After exploring this weeks tools, I am glad that I have been introduced to all that is available for me a my students. Each of the tools that I explored has potential to be a great resource in my classroom. I also identified a few students in our Student Profiles that would greatly benefit from these tools.
I liked Diigo because you can create documents and students can post on it and you can post back. You and your students can add sticky notes and highlights. The main components are "Bookmark, highlight, sticky note, share." It makes reading interactive and you can work on it with your students. You can add questions inline in the work and it becomes a sticky note with a question and students can answer in line. I think this would be great for a student like Rebecca, who has constant trouble with organization. Diigo allows for constant back and forth conversation, in one place, which makes it easy to organize thoughts and answer questions. It has great study tools, and organization tools such as highlighters, and sticky notes.
I liked Little Bird Tales for younger learners because you can "capture the voice of childhood." It's a great tool because it's very creative, fun, interactive, and motivating. Classes can create online books with artwork, photos, and voice. Stories can be personally narrated by the teacher or students! Online books can be created by using digital pictures or scans, and even an art pad for digital drawings. The work you create is clearly displayed in slideshow format, and it's a great way to get students to show off their work!
I liked Titan Pad alot, and it was actually what my group chose as our tool for this weeks challenge. It's a great collaborative tool. It looks a lot like google docs, which I have always had success with! You can see the history of the document, there are colors to differentiate users, you can see each others edits and you can work together. I thought personally as a teacher, this is a great tool, especially if I am teaching in a CTT classroom. It really allow for collaboration. The document can be edited at the same time, so there is no conflict. Each persons idea is highlighted in a color specific to them, so the document is organized and concise. It's a great way to also keep track of lessons week by week. It can be added too and because of the "history tool" you can see the changes that have been made, and go back if something is not working.
Voicethread looks like an awesome interactive webinar tool. It would be a great resource for online classes. It is a cloud based application that allows you to upload many different types of media, and it stays on the internet. It works like a slideshow. It's great because others can join in and make comments through microphone, webcam, text, phone, or by uploading audio files, which all users have access to! It's a great multi-modal format for critiques, reflection, collaborations, discussions etc.
Popplet is place for you ideas. It looks like a web graphic organizer, where students can post their thoughts and random ideas about a certain topic. This is a great way to incorporate unique thoughts and ideas through personalized thought bubbles, and to brainstorm across any subject. It's also great for behavior management, because students can keep their thoughts in a cohesive location (thought bubbles) and they can be creative when expressing themselves, so they do not act out in class. You can share it with friends and it can be edited in "real time" on your computer or iPad! This could be great for someone like Michael who likes to explore his own interests, he can write down his questions and comments without calling out, so he gets his questions down on "paper," but does not interrupt the class, and he can use visual representation with this tool.
Stixy is a tool a lot like popplet, but using sticky notes. It looks like the “dash board” on a mac computer, where you can add in all your ideas. I had mixed feelings about it. I liked that you have the abilty to share with other members, and you can upload documents, photos, and sticky notes. However, it can be cumbersome and overwhelming in presentation and appears somewhat difficult to navigate.
Prezi looks a tool useful for presentations. It looks a lot like PowerPoint. However, I think that it is a tool that I would have to really explore, and get comfortable with all the options it offers. I do like how it is very flexible, and has a freestyle option for adding text and images. This makes it very easy to add in all types of files that I would like to incorporate into a powerpoint, with out much limitation.
These are all awesome tools, that I will try to incorporate into my classroom!
After exploring this weeks tools, I am glad that I have been introduced to all that is available for me a my students. Each of the tools that I explored has potential to be a great resource in my classroom. I also identified a few students in our Student Profiles that would greatly benefit from these tools.
I liked Diigo because you can create documents and students can post on it and you can post back. You and your students can add sticky notes and highlights. The main components are "Bookmark, highlight, sticky note, share." It makes reading interactive and you can work on it with your students. You can add questions inline in the work and it becomes a sticky note with a question and students can answer in line. I think this would be great for a student like Rebecca, who has constant trouble with organization. Diigo allows for constant back and forth conversation, in one place, which makes it easy to organize thoughts and answer questions. It has great study tools, and organization tools such as highlighters, and sticky notes.
I liked Little Bird Tales for younger learners because you can "capture the voice of childhood." It's a great tool because it's very creative, fun, interactive, and motivating. Classes can create online books with artwork, photos, and voice. Stories can be personally narrated by the teacher or students! Online books can be created by using digital pictures or scans, and even an art pad for digital drawings. The work you create is clearly displayed in slideshow format, and it's a great way to get students to show off their work!
I liked Titan Pad alot, and it was actually what my group chose as our tool for this weeks challenge. It's a great collaborative tool. It looks a lot like google docs, which I have always had success with! You can see the history of the document, there are colors to differentiate users, you can see each others edits and you can work together. I thought personally as a teacher, this is a great tool, especially if I am teaching in a CTT classroom. It really allow for collaboration. The document can be edited at the same time, so there is no conflict. Each persons idea is highlighted in a color specific to them, so the document is organized and concise. It's a great way to also keep track of lessons week by week. It can be added too and because of the "history tool" you can see the changes that have been made, and go back if something is not working.
Voicethread looks like an awesome interactive webinar tool. It would be a great resource for online classes. It is a cloud based application that allows you to upload many different types of media, and it stays on the internet. It works like a slideshow. It's great because others can join in and make comments through microphone, webcam, text, phone, or by uploading audio files, which all users have access to! It's a great multi-modal format for critiques, reflection, collaborations, discussions etc.
Popplet is place for you ideas. It looks like a web graphic organizer, where students can post their thoughts and random ideas about a certain topic. This is a great way to incorporate unique thoughts and ideas through personalized thought bubbles, and to brainstorm across any subject. It's also great for behavior management, because students can keep their thoughts in a cohesive location (thought bubbles) and they can be creative when expressing themselves, so they do not act out in class. You can share it with friends and it can be edited in "real time" on your computer or iPad! This could be great for someone like Michael who likes to explore his own interests, he can write down his questions and comments without calling out, so he gets his questions down on "paper," but does not interrupt the class, and he can use visual representation with this tool.
Stixy is a tool a lot like popplet, but using sticky notes. It looks like the “dash board” on a mac computer, where you can add in all your ideas. I had mixed feelings about it. I liked that you have the abilty to share with other members, and you can upload documents, photos, and sticky notes. However, it can be cumbersome and overwhelming in presentation and appears somewhat difficult to navigate.
Prezi looks a tool useful for presentations. It looks a lot like PowerPoint. However, I think that it is a tool that I would have to really explore, and get comfortable with all the options it offers. I do like how it is very flexible, and has a freestyle option for adding text and images. This makes it very easy to add in all types of files that I would like to incorporate into a powerpoint, with out much limitation.
These are all awesome tools, that I will try to incorporate into my classroom!
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Blog #4- Kurzweil and Bookshare!
After exploring Kurzweil, watching
the video demonstrations, and doing some research, I really think it’s an
amazing device! I love the text-to-speech option! It’s really great for
students with reading difficulties, and students with blindness and visual
impairments, which is so important! It really helps hold true that all students
should have equal access to the material! Similarly Bookshare has a braille
feature which is amazing and an enlarging tool to make text easier to read!
Kurzweil is incredible for English
language learners, students with learning disabilities, and visually and/or physically
impaired students. I loved that the two applications we are exploring,
Bookshare and Kurweil, can be used together! Books can be downloaded into Kurzweil
from Bookshare! Students can have access to those books, as well as text files,
worksheets, quizzes, and so much more! The material can be read in different
languages, different sizes, and fonts. There are dictionaries and thesauruses
available for students, including a bilingual dictionary for those English
language learners who may be reading a book in their native language. The Internet
is available through Kurzweil, so as you type in your search and find
information, Kurzweil reads it back to you!
These technological tools are great
for students who not only have trouble reading by also writing. Students many
times have great ideas and they can express themselves orally, but when it
comes to writing it down it may not be legible. I think its amazing that students
can type of their work or even scan it in, and they can hear what they are
writing as they are writing it, so they can identify their mistakes.
These applications really promote
instruction differentiation! It really helps the statement “Learning has no
boundaries,” hold true! Kurzweil can help students take a test. It’s easy for
teachers to use; they can upload a document students can access it, complete
it, and they can submit it back. It’s very user friendly and makes the material
accessible to all! It’s also a great study tool because you can highlight key
concepts in different colors and create tabs for them. I really like the word prediction
because I think it is useful for students who have trouble spelling, they can
check for words they may be unsure of and have it spelled correctly. However, I
know sometimes I get frustrated with word predictions, because it gives me
options that are no where near what I want to spell! This could be confusing if
the student doesn’t know which word they wan to use. I do love that the spell
check doesn’t just change the word for you but sounds out how you spelled it
incorrectly and then after it corrects it reads it the proper way!
In Bookshare my favorite feature
besides the braille option is the multi-modal
reading option because students read the words and hear what is being read
simultaneously! This helps students who are lower readers, readers with visual
impairments, and those with dyslexia! Decoding can be very hard and both of
these programs make it easier and great practice! What a way to learn!
These programs really promote instruction differentiation.
Unfortunately, the PC version
offers more, which is upsetting because most computers given by the DOE are MACs,
and I personally own a MAC. But it says coming soon, hopefully very soon!
I think Kurzweil would really help someone like Luke. Kurzweil has
access to digital books, worksheets, study guides, assignments and quizzes.
Having everything in one place enables students to have easy access to them and
stay organized; a file can't get lost! For a student like Luke, who has
executive functioning difficulties, all of these organization features would be
great for him. He can mark off where his class is in their reading so he never
feels left behind, and he can work on assignments and save it and go back to it,
all in one place so he won’t loose them. His teacher can highlight key points
that he should focus on when reading directions to help him with his decoding
issues. There is a dictionary feature so he can look up things he is unclear
about since he feels uncomfortable asking for help. Kurzweil will also help
with his dyslexia because it highlights words as they are read out loud, so he can
see the word and hear it simultaneously, helping him with reading and decoding
words. It is also great because it can do the same for his writing. All of
these features will help ensure that his disability will not prevent him from
accessing the material!
Kurzweil would also be amazing for a
student like Sam. He has trouble with long-term memory and will often loose
skills that he has learned. I think having Kurzweil by his side, he will be
more successful! He can take notes, highlight key terms, make a tab of
information on a skill, and the best part is that he can save it! Having all
your notes in one place and being able to go back and look it at, will be
greatly beneficial for Sam to review, and recall the information, so he will
not forget it so readily. Sam can outline information using Kurzweil’s option of using pre-made graphic organizers
to help jog his memory. Since Sam’s
written expressive language is both below grade level and far below his own
oral expressive language in sentence structure, composition structure, word
choice, and explanation, Kurzweil is incredible for him. It has a brainstorm tool where he can
write down ideas and outline his written work. Because Kurzweil has a
text-to-speech function, he can hear what he is writing as he writes it, which
can help him since he has a higher oral expressive language, he can compare it
to how he would express his work. Sam could also use the teacher-guided checklist
to review his work and have it as a guideline to know what he needs to
complete.
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