Quality resources for digital learning.All students should be using high-quality Internet resources in core content learning. Now, it's easier than ever to find first-rate resources. Elementary students in Eureka use computer software to create multimedia presentations, complete with video clips and narration, to show fellow students and parents what they have learned. Middle school students in Santa Maria Santa Maria, city, Brazil Santa Maria (sän`tə mərē`ə), city (1991 pop. 217,592), Rio Grande do Sul state, S Brazil. It is a major railroad terminus and the site of an important military base. collect weather data in their coastal community then share and compare it via the Internet with students in a California desert community. High school students in San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. take virtual field trips to the Johnson Space Center in Houston and other remote sites via videoconferencing A real time video session between two or more users or between two or more locations. Although the first videoconferencing was done with traditional analog TV and satellites, inhouse room systems became popular in the early 1980s after Compression Labs pioneered digitized video systems . Technologies available today help students tap in to real-world projects and communicate what they have learned with a wider audience. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a recent survey conducted by the California Technology Assistance Project, multimedia computers and Internet access See how to access the Internet. are available in more than half of California classrooms. What we do with those technologies can have a great impact on student learning if we use them to their full advantage. A few key software and Internet resources can make a difference. Multimedia presentation development, Internet-based learning and access to distant resources can spark student learning. Finding high quality resources Every computer for student use should have software for multimedia production. Programs such as Kid Pix Kid Pix is a bitmap drawing program aimed at children. Originally created by Craig Hickman, it was first released for the Macintosh in 1989 and subsequently published in 1991 by Brøderbund. in primary grades, and Hyperstudio or PowerPoint in later grades, can be used by teachers or students to create slideshow-like presentations that incorporate textual information, still and/or video images and sounds. These can be used in any subject to teach concepts or to demonstrate what has been learned. Hyperstudio presentations by Eureka fourth-graders showed emerging ability to gather and select information (in print and visuals) from various sources (including software and the Internet) to communicate what they had learned about volcanoes and earthquakes. These multimedia creations can be shared with audiences beyond the classroom, either in person or over the Internet with the easy Web publishing Creating a Web site and placing it on the Web server. A Web site is a collection of HTML pages with the home page typically named INDEX.HTML. Web sites are designed using Web authoring software which provides a graphical layout capability or by hand coding in HTML or both. options included in most of these programs. Digital video creation with software such as iMovie, Movie Works or Premier can be used to achieve the same objectives, but it comes with a higher price tag. All students should be using high-quality Internet resources in core content learning. But there are many resources online that are not useful for student learning. Sites such as Pacific Bell's Blue Web'n (http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/bluewebn), Classroom Connect's Best of the Web resources link (http://connectedteacher.classroom.com), and Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators (http://school.discovery.com/schrockguide) maintain links to Web resources that have been evaluated for content quality and appropriateness for student use. Teachers can become part of Internet-based exchange projects in the project registry at Global School Network (http://www.gsn.org), Classroom Connect (listed above), NASA's Quest site (http://quest.arc.nasa.gov) and other sites. After participating in online learning experiences, students at McKenzie Junior High in Santa Maria have developed their own posters, Web pages and presentations to summarize what they learned. Shortcuts See Win Shortcuts. to learning sites made as lists or computer bookmarks can reduce the time that is wasted in searching for materials. Structured Internet learning activities such as those at SCORE (http://www.score.k12.ca.us), or created by classroom teachers for their own classes using Filamentality (http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil) or Trackstar (http://www.scrtec.org/track) can be highly effective by guiding student online interaction with the content. A well-developed Internet lesson such as "A Day in the ER" by Dr. Robert Kirk Robert Kirk is a professor emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Nottingham. Kirk is known for his work on philosophical zombies—putative unconscious beings physically and behaviorally identical to human beings. (http://scorescience.humboldt. k12.ca.us/fast/teachers/ER/scoreindex.htm) links students to Internet resources to locate specific information, solve a problem and present findings that achieve core content standards. Evaluations are often built into online lessons, and students and teachers know the criteria for success and how well they have done after completing the project. Distance-based technologies Two-way videoconferencing software or all-in-one videoconferencing units enable students to visit people and places without leaving the school site. For the price of three long-distance phone calls, students can meet in real time with their Congressman in Washington, interact with scientists in Antarctica, or present inventions to one other across the state. Students in San Diego have been doing science projects using videoconferencing technologies over a network to enable multiple schools to access experts and share information at the same time. Distance-based technologies can create opportunities for students to attend courses at other schools or universities, or to collaborate on projects with students from around their city to around the world. Learning to use software programs designed to involve all students in content-based activities through media clips and re-printable text materials can change the paradigm from using technology as a drill-and-practice delivery vehicle to using technology to orchestrate or·ches·trate tr.v. or·ches·trat·ed, or·ches·trat·ing, or·ches·trates 1. To compose or arrange (music) for performance by an orchestra. 2. powerful learning. Software such as "Hidden in Rocks" by Tom Snyder Tom Snyder (May 12, 1936 - July 29, 2007) was an American television personality, news anchor, and radio personality best known for his late night talk shows The Tomorrow Show, on the NBC television network in the late 1970s and '80s, and The Late Late Show Productions or "Science Sleuths" by Videodiscovery provide prompts for problem-based learning problem-based learning Medical education An instruction strategy in which groups of students are presented with clinical problems without prior study or lectures. See Cooperative learning. and require only one computer to implement. The California Department of Education's soon-to-be launched California Learning Resources Network will help educators locate and select quality software, video and Internet resources to address California content standards. Supplementary instructional technology There are two types of instructional technology: those with a systems approach, and those focusing on sensory technologies. The definition of instructional technology prepared by the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) Definitions and Terminology materials will be reviewed according to state board-adopted criteria, which will parallel the instructional materials evaluation process currently used by the California Curriculum Commission. Educators can look forward to this source to be able to select quality technology-based resources. Changing the way teachers teach Teachers are key to integrating instructional technology with classroom curricula. New, high-end computers are little more than typewriters or projectors (at best) to game stations (at worst) without teacher training. The technology, if not used to positively impact student learning, can instead be a distraction to learning. Experiencing the process for a multimedia project and learning to manage its development are crucial. For educators to incorporate technology into learning activities in a standards-based environment, training is critical. Technology resources only impact student learning when used appropriately. Teachers who have participated in technology conferences, leadership institutes or resource development projects report changing the way they teach with technology. Computer Using Educators hosts conferences each year at which educators can see models of technology projects in action from other educators. Institutes and seminars offered by county offices and CTAP CTAP California Technology Assistance Project CTAP California Telephone Access Program CTAP Career Transition Assistance Plan (for US Federal employees) CTAP Clear to Auscultation & Percussion regional training centers immerse im·merse tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es 1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge. 2. To baptize by submerging in water. 3. educators in teaching with technology. Many of these trainings are designed for teacher teams and some include students as part of the team, learning along with teachers. Resource development projects such as SCORE, VONS VONS Committee for the Defense of the Unjustly Persecuted (Czech) Teach the Teachers and others have reported significant changes in teacher development as a result of creating a product for the project. The California State University system California State University System, coordinating agency established in 1960 by the merger of individual California state colleges, now consisting of 23 campuses. recognizes the importance of teacher training with technology, particularly in light of the new technology proficiencies for teacher credential candidates. CSU See DSU/CSU. 1. CSU - California State University. 2. CSU - Cleveland State University. 3. CSU - Channel Service Unit. has launched a program to provide intensive training and year-long follow-up toward that goal. Teachers will learn to select and use technologies with students to achieve content standards in a variety of programs involving partnerships between CSU campuses and technology training agencies. Achieving the vision Quality examples of technology-infused learning are becoming easier to find. Many are beginning to appear online and in county offices and regional CTAP locations. Video vignettes and multimedia exemplars of best practices in technology are being captured in partnerships between the California Department of Education The California Department of Education is a California agency that oversees public education. The Department oversees funding, testing, and holds local educational agencies accountable for student achievement. and companies such as Apple Computer and posted online. These partnerships promise greater access to models for creating and achieving the vision of technology's powerful impact on student learning in California. Cathy Dickerson is curriculum specialist for technology, Humboldt County Humboldt County is the name of three counties in the United States:
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