Engaging Readers in Inquirybased Learning through Online WebQuests - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Engaging Readers in Inquirybased Learning through Online WebQuests

Description:

Engaging Readers in Inquiry-based Learning through On-line WebQuests ... Quotes ... Who Was the Real Shakespeare? http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~srl03e/eleven. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: larrybed
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Engaging Readers in Inquirybased Learning through Online WebQuests


1
Engaging Readers in Inquiry-based Learning
through On-line WebQuests
Harry Potter and thePhilosophers Quest
Larry Bedenbaugh 2006 Just Read, Florida!K-12
Leadership Conference
2
IRA Position Statement on Integrating Literacy
and Technology in the Curriculum
  • The Internet and other forms of information and
    communication technology (ICT) are redefining the
    nature of literacy. To become fully literate in
    todays world, students must become proficient in
    the new literacies of ICT. Therefore, literacy
    educators have a responsibility to integrate
    these technologies into their literacy curricula.
  • Adopted by the IRA Board of Directors, September
    2001

3
Florida Legislative Rule 6A-5.065
  • The Educator Accomplished Practices of the
    Florida State Board of Education
  • 12) Accomplished Practice Twelve - Technology.
  • (a) Accomplished level. The accomplished teacher
    uses appropriate technology in teaching and
    learning processes.

4
Consider These Quotes
  • Integrating 21st century skills into K12
    education empowers students to learn and achieve
    at the level necessary to succeed in this
    century. Education will become both more
    invigorating and relevant when it reflects the
    realities and challenges of contemporary life.
  • John Wilson, Executive Director National
    Education Association

5
Definitions of 21st Century Literacy
  • Partnership for 21st Century Skills
  • NCREL 21st Century Skills
  • ETS ICT Literacy
  • Pacific Bell/UCLA Initiative for 21st Century
    Literacies
  • NMC 21st Century Literacy

6
Definitions of 21st Century Literacy
  • Basic literacy
  • Scientific literacy
  • Mathematical literacy
  • Political literacy
  • Economic literacy
  • Historical literacy
  • Visual literacy
  • Media literacy
  • Digital literacy
  • Computer literacy
  • Technological literacy
  • Information literacy
  • Information and Communications literacy
  • Multicultural literacy

7
21st Century Literacy
  • Bottom Line
  • 21st Century Literacy is about more than having
    good technology skills.
  • It is learning core subjects and applying these
    learning skills by using ICT tools while
    maintaining a multicultural awareness.

8
himself. Tomorrow's illiterate will not be the
man who can't read he will be the man who has
not learned how to learn.
Consider These Quotes
  • The new education must teach the individual how
    to classify and reclassify information, how to
    evaluate its veracity, how to change categories
    when necessary, how to move from the concrete to
    the abstract and back, how to look at problems
    from a new direction - how to teach himself.
    Tomorrow's illiterate will not be the man who
    can't read he will be the man who has not
    learned how to learn.
  • Herbert Gerjuoy
  • Psychologist

9
Project-basedLearning Description
  • Project-based learning asks students to work in
    groups to solve a challenging problem.
  • Project-based learning asks students to
    investigate issues and topics addressing
    real-world problems while integrating subjects
    across the curriculum.

10
Project-based Learning Description
  • Students decide how to approach the problem and
    what activities to pursue.
  • Students gather information from a variety of
    sources and synthesize, analyze, and derive
    knowledge from it.

11
Project-based Learning Description
  • At the end, students demonstrate their newly
    acquired knowledge and are judged by how much
    they have learned and how well they communicate
    it.
  • Throughout the process, the teachers role is to
    guide and advise, rather than direct and manage,
    student work.

12
Project-based Learning Characteristics
  • Curricular content
  • Multimedia
  • Student direction
  • Collaboration
  • Real world connection
  • Extended time frame
  • Alternative assessment

13
WebQuests Bernie Dodge Tom March
  • The WebQuest model was developed in early 1995 at
    San Diego State University by Bernie Dodge with
    Tom March.
  • A WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented activity in
    which most or all of the information used by
    learners is drawn from the Web.
  • WebQuests are designed to use learners' time
    well, to focus on using information rather than
    looking for it, and to support learners' thinking
    at the levels of analysis, synthesis and
    evaluation.

14
WebQuestsStructure
  • Introduction
  • Task(s)
  • Process
  • Evaluation
  • Conclusion
  • Teacher Page

15
WebQuestsStructure
  • Introduction
  • Sets the stage and provides some background
    information.
  • The purpose of this section is to both prepare
    and hook the reader.
  • Write a short paragraph here to introduce the
    activity or lesson to the students. If there is a
    role or scenario involved then here is where
    you'll set the stage. It is also in this section
    that you'll communicate the Big Question that the
    whole WebQuest is centered around.

16
WebQuestsStructure
  • Task(s)
  • Is doable and interesting.
  • The task focuses learners on what they are going
    to do - specifically, the culminating performance
    or product that drives all of the learning
    activities.
  • Describe crisply and clearly what the end result
    of the learners' activities will be. Don't list
    the steps that students will go through to get to
    the end point. That belongs in the Process
    section.

17
WebQuestsStructure
  • Process
  • This section outlines/describes how the learners
    will accomplish the task. Scaffolding includes
    clear steps, resources, and tools for organizing
    information.
  • To accomplish the task, what steps should the
    learners go through?...Learners will access the
    on-line resources that you've identified as they
    go through the Process.... In the Process block,
    you might also provide some guidance on how to
    organize the information gathered.

18
WebQuestsStructure
  • Evaluation
  • This section describes the evaluation criteria
    needed to meet performance and content standards.
  • Describe to the learners how their performance
    will be evaluated. The assessment rubric(s)
    should align with the culminating project or
    performance, as outlined in the task section of
    the WebQuest. Specify whether there will be a
    common grade for group work vs. individual
    grades.

19
WebQuestsStructure
  • Conclusion
  • The conclusion brings closure and encourages
    reflection.
  • Summarize what the learners will have
    accomplished or learned by completing this
    activity or lesson. You might also include some
    rhetorical questions or additional links to
    encourage them to extend their thinking into
    other content beyond this lesson.

20
WebQuestsStructure
  • Teacher Page
  • The teacher page includes information to help
    other teachers implement the WebQuest, including
    target learners, standards, notes for teaching
    the unit, and, in some cases, examples of student
    work.

21
WebQuestsExamples
  • Heres the Holiday for You
  • http//yorkcountyschools.org/mes/Holiday20Webques
    t/index.htm
  • Who Was the Real Shakespeare?
  • http//garnet.acns.fsu.edu/srl03e/eleven.htm

22
WebQuestsLevels
  • Short Term WebQuest
  • Is designed to be completed in one to three class
    periods.
  • Has an instructional goal of knowledge
    acquisition and integration.
  • At the end of a short term WebQuest, a learner
    will have grappled with a significant amount of
    new information and made sense of it.

23
WebQuests Critical Attributes
  • Short Term WebQuest
  • An introduction that sets the stage and provides
    some background information.
  • A task that is doable and interesting.
  • A set of information sources needed to complete
    the task.

24
WebQuestsLevels
  • Longer Term WebQuest
  • Typically take between one week and a month to
    complete.
  • Has an instructional goal of extending and
    refining knowledge.

25
WebQuestsLevels
  • Longer Term WebQuest
  • After completing a longer term WebQuest, a
    learner would have analyzed a body of knowledge
    deeply, transformed it in some way, and
    demonstrated an understanding of the material by
    creating something that others can respond to,
    on-line or off-.

26
WebQuestsCritical Attributes
  • Longer Term WebQuest
  • A description of the process the learners should
    go through in accomplishing the task.
  • Some guidance on how to organize the information
    acquired.
  • A conclusion that brings closure to the quest,
    reminds the learners about what they've learned,
    and perhaps encourages them to extend the
    experience into other domains.

27
WebQuestsAdvantages
  • Students
  • Familiarity
  • Motivating
  • Accessible outside the classroom

28
WebQuestsAdvantages
  • Teachers
  • Familiarity
  • Encourages effective/structured use of Internet
    time
  • Accommodates learners diverse needs (individual
    or group)

29
WebQuestsDisdvantages
  • Available WebQuests may not meet specific needs
  • Creating own requires teacher time/ technical
    skills
  • Necessary pedagogical skills
  • Requires computers/Internet access
  • Broken links
  • Readability level of linked resources
  • Web focus ignores other resources

30
WebQuestsBernie Dodge Tom March
  • The WebQuest Page
  • http//webquest.sdsu.edu/webquest.html

31
WebQuestsBernie Dodge Tom March
  • The WebQuest Portal
  • http//webquest.org

32
QuestGarden
  • QuestGarden 1.0
  • http//webquest.org/questgarden/author/

33
QuestGarden
  • QuestGarden 1.0
  • Step-by-step prompted guidance on creating a
    WebQuest
  • Browser-based no software needed
  • Emphasis on sharing resources and advice

34
QuestGarden
  • QuestGarden 1.0
  • WYSIWYG text formatting
  • Ability to upload pictures and supplementary
    files
  • Based on design patterns

35
QuestGarden
  • QuestGarden 1.0
  • http//webquest.org/questgarden/author/

36
QuestGarden
  • Future
  • Free until September 1, 2006
  • 20 for a 2 year subscription after that
  • 30 day free trial
  • Access to published WebQuests will always be free

37
Contact Info
  • Larry Bedenbaugh
  • FLaRE Center
  • UCF - Teaching Academy Suite 403
  • 4000 Central Florida Blvd
  • Orlando, FL 32816-1250
  • lbedenba_at_mail.firn.edu
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com