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Internet: Taking Learning Beyond the Classroom Walls

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poster, travel brochure, report, newspaper article, Travel journal, diary, sketchbook ... Have a sense of adventure! Let's See What WE can do! Everything is Online ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Internet: Taking Learning Beyond the Classroom Walls


1
Internet Taking Learning Beyond the Classroom
Walls
  • Milpitas Christian School
  • January 3, 2005

Gail Lovely www.GailLovely.com
2
Overview of Session
  • This workshop gives participants hands-on
    guidance in locating Web sites for virtual tours
    that enhance existing classroom lessons.
    Participants will develop activities that take
    their students on journeys to other landsand
    beyond.

3
Objectives
  • Explore a variety of Internet resources that
    support the classroom curriculum.
  • Understand how to use Web site evaluation
    skills/rubrics.
  • Gain an understanding of the variety of online
    activities and projects.
  • Design a lesson using virtual tours on the
    Internet.

4
Two Truths and a Dream
  • http//www.educationworld.com/a_lesson/lesson/less
    on318.shtml

5
Wishes, Hopes, Fears
  • Every Workshop brings with it wishes, hopes and
    fears (or concerns)
  • What are ours?

6
Agenda
  • Introductions and Overview
  • Discussion of Strategies and Success Stories
  • Examples of Virtual Field Trips
  • Tools
  • Filamentality
  • TrackStar
  • Word
  • Rubistar
  • Work Time
  • Evaluation and Sharing

7
Strategies and Successes
8
Virtual Field Trips
  • A definition A trip using the Internet which
    utilizes real-world resources or other rich
    resources to create experiences which are similar
    in depth/impact to real field trips.

9
NOT a replacementfor the Real Thing!
  • Field trips of our past
  • Successful?
  • Issues?
  • Problems?
  • Lessons Learned?

10
Strengths
  • Use of Primary Sources
  • Letters, first hand accounts, pottery shards,
    diaries, THE places
  • Primary sources encourage students to make
    inferences, hypothesize, and make comparisons.
  • No one else is deciding what is important
  • Virtual primary sources can provide these as well

11
Strengths
  • Can create a more student-directed approach to
    learning
  • Provide multiple points of view or entry points
    to information and knowledge

12
Types of Virtual Field Trips
  • Fact Finding Missions
  • Awareness Explorations
  • Exposure to Primary Resources
  • Multimedia Approach to Content
  • Preparation for Actual Field Trips
  • Follow-up to Actual Field Trips
  • Way to Show What One Knows

13
Fact Finding Missions
  • Students visit a variety of online resources to
    learn about a topic or concept.
  • Can be more like a scavenger hunt with guiding
    questions but be careful not to create an
    online worksheet.
  • One example http//teacher.scholastic.com/activit
    ies/globaltrek/index.htm

14
Awareness Explorations
  • Students explore a land, culture, biome, career,
    to gain basic understanding or as an introduction
    to a topic.
  • This approach can lead to application of
    knowledge or information later, or as a follow-up
    to a unit of study.
  • Example (A compelling story)
  • http//www.brookfieldzoo.org/pagegen/wok/index_f4.
    html
  • http//www.greatestplaces.org/book_pages/top.html

15
Exposure to Primary Resources
  • A focused, first-hand experience MAY be the best,
    but seeing things or hearing things you cant
    hear or see or visit may be almost as good.
  • Look, listen, explore the artifact, article,
    interview and come to your own conclusions, form
    your own questions for further exploration or
    validate your prior learning.
  • An Example
  • http//4hgarden.msu.edu/kidstour/tour.html
  • http//www.chimacum.wednet.edu/elementary/oregontr
    ailVFT.html

16
Multimedia Approach to Content
  • Listening to the music of a time period, looking
    at the art of a nation or culture, exploring
    ideas, concepts and time periods through audio,
    video, art, and more to enliven and enrich the
    experience.
  • Examples
  • http//www.thebeijingguide.com/great_wall_of_china
    /index.html
  • http//www.discovery.com/guides/history/titanic/Ti
    tanic/titanic.html

17
Preparation for Actual Field Trips
  • You can use or create a virtual field trip to
    help focus your students during a REAL field
    trip.
  • Remove some distractions or provide some
    incentives for the physical trip.
  • Provide a taste of what to expect and what they
    may want to explore more.
  • Provide tools to prompt thought while on the
    trip.
  • An Example
  • http//www.thinker.org/fam/education/publications/
    ghost/index.html

18
Follow-up to Actual Field Trips
  • Compare a REAL trip with a virtual trip to the
    same (or a different) place
  • Provides insight into how similar or different
    things may be (Are all farms alike?)
  • Provides insight into how point-of-view may color
    presentation of facts online
  • An Example
  • http//www.msichicago.org/exhibit/farm/video.html

19
Way to Show What One Knows
  • Students can create their own virtual field trip
    for others.
  • Students can explore on line and then compare and
    contrast their experiences.
  • An Example
  • http//trackstar.4teachers.org/trackstar/ts/viewTr
    ack.do?number242449

20
Challenges
  • While virtual field trips made with the Internet
    have some great advantages,  they also create
    several challenges. 
  • Getting more comfortable with a learning process
    which is more controlled by the student and less
    directed by the teacher. 
  • Having enough computers for all the students to
    take their virtual field trips.
  • Planning, planning, planning!

21
Virtual Field Trips Planning Steps
  • Curriculum needs to drive the trip
  • What does it help you teach or your students
    learn?
  • (Internet skills is not enough)
  • (Being interesting or fun or cool is not enough)
  • You can often repurpose a trip to work FOR YOU
  • Reading in Content Areas or for Details
  • Enrichment
  • Culture to go with a story to be read
  • Teacher is still central in the planning!

22
Virtual Field Trips Planning Steps
  • Think through your lesson planning steps like
    normal!
  • Introduce
  • Purpose
  • Input
  • Guided Practice
  • Independent Practice
  • Assessment and Evaluation

23
Virtual Field Trips Planning Steps
  • Extend the learning during
  • Paper Guidebooks
  • Passports
  • Travel Buddies
  • Peers
  • Experienced travellers
  • Adult helpers
  • Sketchbooks
  • Question sheets, scavenger hunts or other guided
    experiences

24
Virtual Field Trips Planning Steps
  • And extend the learning after
  • Create a Multimedia product
  • Multimedia show, report or newscast
  • Make a video review
  • Create a Print product
  • poster, travel brochure, report, newspaper
    article,
  • Travel journal, diary, sketchbook
  • Create a Performance
  • Share a story or favorite place
  • Act out a tour or visit
  • Tell about it

25
Virtual Field Trips Make them POWERFUL!
  • Connections, connections, connections
  • Guidance (but not spoonfed)
  • Planning
  • Have a sense of adventure!

26
Lets See What WE can do!
27
Everything is Online
  • http//www.gaillovely.com/fieldtrips.htm
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