Start The New Year With Technology - from Discovery Education
Many teachers have been pinning ideas for the beginning of the school year on Pinterest. But what became apparent to
me was that none of the ideas that I saw used any technology, but each idea
could so easily be transformed into a technology-rich lesson. (Don’t get me
wrong- they are all GREAT lessons/ideas- I am just a Technology Integration
Specialist- so looking for the tech- OK?) So, if you are interested in using
more technology in your classroom this year, let’s start from DAY
1! Here is how to transform some of these ideas:
1. About Me Graphic Organizer:

6. First Week Graphing
Graphing Our Favorite Summer Activity comes from Madden’s Monsterous Masterminds. Graphing is a fun way to use real-world math while learning about the students. There are some great technology tools that will allow teachers to create interactive graphs with their students on their interactive whiteboards as they are discussing various topics. Recently the iPad app Haiku Deck has added a graphing feature to their presentation app. This allows teachers to search for an image that represents the discussion and then to instantly graph the results (such as in the middle image labeled transportation- how students get to school). Just connect the iPad to the interactive whiteboard to share the magic with class. No iPad? Try a website such as the Data Handling Site by Primary National Strategy. Here you can graph your data with a bar graph or pie chart.
There are so many more ways to use technology to transform your beginning of the year and “getting to know you” lessons. Share some of your favorites in the comments below. I hope I have inspired you to think about integrating technology more this year as you begin the new school year.
1. About Me Graphic Organizer:
This first cool idea comes from the Thoughts of a Third Grade Teacher blog. A graphic organizer
is a great, visual way to for students to learn about each other about the
beginning of the year and also reminds students how to use an organizer for
subject areas. Instead of drawing, have students create beautiful, visual
graphic organizers with Popplet- which is available as an iPad app (I suggest the FREE version: Popplet Lite) or online atwww.popplet.com. Students can easily add
boxes of information that can contain text, images (imported), drawing, and
videos (in the web version). I prefer the iPad app over the web version since
the web version requires students to log in with an email-based account.
2. About Me Poster:
About Me posters are incredibly commonplace in the classroom. How much
money have you spent on these pre-printed forms over your career? Isn’t it time
we made them more interesting- or personal? This is a great time to try Discovery Education’s
NEW Board Builder tool with your students! Once you (the teacher) are logged
into your account, you need to set your students up with accounts. When your
students log into Discovery Education, they have a special place where they can
interact with Discovery Education content including use of the Board Builder
tool for creating poster-like content. Students can add images, text, video,
documents, and links to create a content poster with their own media or they can
incorporate the media directly from Discovery’s resources.
3. What I Did This Summer
This cute idea from A Love for
Teaching blog has students drawing a scene from their summer adventures in a
pair of sunglasses. It is a great visual that will have students sharing about
their summer fun. However, with the addition of the Common Core standards that
we will all be implementing, this is a perfect time to pull in some of those
standards (such as writing from experience). To add some technology, have
students write up a little story about their summertime fun (using tech here
would be good, too) and then have students choose/highlight the key words from
their story to add a Tagxedo image. The Tagxedo image is an image created of words that upon viewing
should convey the basic story to the viewer due to the choice of words
(character, setting, description, etc.) without reading the entire text. Tagxedo.com comes with a variety of images to choose from, but
if you need a specific image it can be uploaded. The Tagxedo images are just as
visual to hang in the hallways or on a bulletin board and add writing to the
mix!
4. Getting To Know You Venn Diagrams

I love this idea from Eduperry.com. Everyday the teacher has a new “Do you
like?” question at the beginning of the day. Students add their pictures to the
Venn diagram to answer the question and to indicate that they are present for
the day. Venn diagrams are a great way to teach logic skills, similarities,
differences, sets, comparing, and contrasting. Instead of using hoops and
photographs as suggested in the original article, set this up on your SmartBoard
(or interactive whiteboard) so that students can move their virtual images or
names into the diagram each morning. If you don’t have images of each student,
have your students create an avatar (a representation of themselves) with a fun
avatar creator such ashttp://clayyourself.com. Do you like using
Venn Diagrams for small group or pair activities in the classroom?
ReadWriteThink just put out a new iPad app called Venn Diagrams.
5. Call For Parent Volunteers- and other nasty
paperwork!
Every classroom needs parent volunteers and various other information that
needs to be gathered- but STOP sending all that paper home! Convert all of your
forms to Google Forms where you can neatly collect all of your information from
parents in one place and it will never get lost or damaged in transit. Save the
paper only for families that really need it. If you have a gmail address
(whether personal or school) you have Google Forms! Click on the Google Drive
link at the top of the screen when you are in your email and then click the
CREATE button and get started! You can email your form to whomever you desire
once it is created (and you can even embed it on your web site). Plus, you can
pick pretty themes with no design skills at all. When parents submit a form all
of the data is stored in your form file where you can access it at any time- no
more paper to wrangle.
6. First Week Graphing
Graphing Our Favorite Summer Activity comes from Madden’s Monsterous Masterminds. Graphing is a fun way to use real-world math while learning about the students. There are some great technology tools that will allow teachers to create interactive graphs with their students on their interactive whiteboards as they are discussing various topics. Recently the iPad app Haiku Deck has added a graphing feature to their presentation app. This allows teachers to search for an image that represents the discussion and then to instantly graph the results (such as in the middle image labeled transportation- how students get to school). Just connect the iPad to the interactive whiteboard to share the magic with class. No iPad? Try a website such as the Data Handling Site by Primary National Strategy. Here you can graph your data with a bar graph or pie chart.
There are so many more ways to use technology to transform your beginning of the year and “getting to know you” lessons. Share some of your favorites in the comments below. I hope I have inspired you to think about integrating technology more this year as you begin the new school year.





No comments:
Post a Comment