Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Week 5 ~ Connectivism and Social Learning in Practice


                Dr. Orey states that social learning is when “students actively engage in constructing artifacts and conversing with others” (Orey, 2011).  The use of technology is aiding students to be not only social in proximity but can also be social in a global sense.  Technology is also integrated in this theory by connecting the learner to information and providing many ways of presenting and sharing both in a local and global sense.  When students are doing this in a group, collaborative learning is taking place when students are having constructive conversations and working together to create a product. 

            My students love to tackle a web quest.  “A well designed web quest task is practical, engaging, and elicits student thinking” (Pitler, Hubbell, Kuhn & Malenoski, 2007).  When I taught third grade, South Carolina history, students were asked to research, explore and present a region of our state.  They had choices of ways to present their project and informational web links were provided.  Each group member had a job and they had to report their finding to the rest of the group.  I remember seeing and hearing student helping each other, having conversations about the content and asking for advice on how their part of the presentation was turning out. 

            Today I showed the class voicethread.com.  They are really eager to use it.  We are in the process of writing, illustrating, and publishing books for a neighborhood that feeds into our school that is majority Hispanic families.  The books that our fourth grade students are creating are a product of a collaborative group of three students.  The subjects of these books will be content related on a simplified level and purposeful in teaching English.  The topics of the books will range from community helpers, plants and animals, weather, historical symbols, and many more.  After showing the class voice thread, they had the idea to upload the pages, read the pages and include instructional information.  They said our ESOL and younger grades can learn from these books too if the teacher wants to use them and share with their classes.  All of a sudden, my students want to be writers and illustrators!  You know you have them hooked then you hear classroom content being discussed at the lunch table or at recess! 

 

References

Laureate Education, Inc. Orey (2011). Program eight: Social Learning Theories [Video webcast]. Social learning theories. Retrieved from http://laureate.ecollege.com/ec/crs/default.learn?CourseID=5700267&CPURL=laureate.ecollege.com&Survey=1&47=2594577&ClientNodeID=984650&coursenav=0&bhcp=1

Pitler, H., Hubbell, E., Kuhn, M., & Malenoski, K. (2007). Using technology with classroom instruction that works. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.

            § Chapter 7,”Cooperative Learning”.                                                                          
 
 
 
 
My voicethread URL:  https://voicethread.com/share/3779206/ 
Next week our school will administer a practice writing test to pre-assess our third-fifth grade students before they take the South Carolina state test (PASS) in writing in March.  We have been learning and practicing the different writing genres.  This presentation is a summary of our notes for them to view as a study guide. 
 
 
 
 

2 comments:

  1. Wow Deborah what a great idea of how to use voice thread by having your students create stories for ESOL students. You get cooperative learning at the keyboard and across the keyboard by having students create the work then share that work with other learners. You have my wheels spinning a little now thinking how I could take that premise and transfer it to my high school Biology students. There can be a lot of confusing content and I just couldn't figure out how to integrate voice thread without it being redundant or off target. Thanks to you I now have an idea I can "evolve" (Bio word haha)to fit into my own class room.

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  2. Diane, you are welcome. I always get good ideas or new insights from fellow classmates. That's a benefit from the education field, sharing! Monday (tomorrow) my kids are signing up for Voice thread. They cannot wait to get started. I love when I can implement resources from my Walden class in my classroom right away!

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