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Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Trigonometry Song Remixed!

Last year Grade 11 M&E girls made up a song called Trigonometry is Just So Easy while away on camp. I filmed them singing this song and shared it on this post, Sing for Your Supper.
Towards the end of the year they created the following REMIXED version!


Isn't it fantastic?!


Sunday, April 22, 2012

Feedback: Inkanyezi Seminar at Gateway ScienCentre

Session 1: Connect, by Arthur Preston
@artpreston
blog

"For centuries we've been declaring our independence, and perhaps it's time for us to declare our interdependence." ~ Tiffany Shlain, director/producer of the film Connected.



Arthur looked at three different tools we can use to stay connected with other teachers, as well as to gather and share information:

  • Twitter

The basic info for those who don't know:
- tweets (messages less than 140 characters) are public
- you can follow anyone without them having to follow you back (not like Facebook)
- the tweets of all the people you follow will come up on your Twitter home page
- it can get pretty confusing when you follow lots of people!

How to follow specific conversations:
Hashtags are a way of "tagging" a tweet to show it belongs to a certain topic. For example, yesterday anyone who was tweeting during and about the seminar used the tag #inkanyezi. When you're on Twitter, if you click on any hashtag you see, Twitter will bring up only those tweets that have that hashtag.

Arthur introduced us to #edchatsa. This is a Twitter chat for the South African education community that takes place every Monday evening from 20h30 to 21h30:

"Imagine a weekly gathering of dynamic, innovative and inspiring teachers who engage in lively debate, share resources, offer assistance, challenge paradigms and support each other. Imagine having the opportunity to engage with these teachers in their conversation or simply stop to listen and learn.
Imagine no longer! This gathering happens every Monday evening from 20h30 to 21h30 on Twitter in the form of what is known as a TweetChat. Started in the first week of March 2012, this community of tweeting teachers continues to meet in a virtual setting every week to discuss issues which affect education in South Africa."

To find out more about #edchatsa and how you can take part or just "listen and learn", visit the #edchatsa website.

I shall certainly be checking it out tomorrow night!


  • RSS Readers

According to Wikipedia, an RSS reader is a website that "aggregates syndicated web content such as news headlines, blogs, podcasts, and video blogs (vlogs) in one location for easy viewing."

I use Google Reader to organize all the blogs and websites I follow. It's pretty easy to use. When you find a blog you like and know you'll want to keep following what they have to say, you copy the website url, go to Google Reader, click the red Subscribe button, paste the url and click Add. Whenever there are new posts (articles) available on these blogs, they will show up on your Google Reader home page.


  • Diigo

Diigo is a powerful social bookmarking tool. What this means is that while you are surfing the web, you can collect and organise just about any information you want to be able to look at again later: bookmarks, highlighted portions of webpages, sticky notes, screenshots, pictures etc. You can then access all your saved information on any computer just by signing into your Diigo account.
Click here to learn more about Diigo.

Important take-home message from this session:
The internet isn't just for looking stuff up, it's for interacting.
And don't forget the Barney principle: sharing is caring!
(ie. share your ideas with your colleagues!)



Session 2: Techno-Class, by Robyn Clark
@clarkformaths

We started off this session with a Do Now! "Take out your cell phones and play a song. Stand up and dance to it." Can you imagine if we did this in our classrooms?! The members would love it ;-)



This session was all about practical ways to use cell phones in the classroom. Here are some ideas:

Maths: A photo hunt. Get students to find patterns in real life and take photos on their phones
Maths Lit: Get students to photograph the price of a certain product in different stores (well, that wouldn't work so well in a boarding school, but it could be done over a mid-term break) and then use the information to work out percentage increase/decrease
English: Write a short story on Twitter. Use one tweet (140 characters only) for the beginning, another for the middle and another for the end.

Online textbooks: members can access the Siyavula textbooks on their phone browsers during class, or later in the day when they're doing homework/research and aren't able to use the computers. Tell them to go to the following websites:
http://everythingmaths.co.za
http://everythingscience.co.za

Some hashtags to follow/use on Twitter:
#mathchat
#edchat
#twoogle (instead of Googling something, go to Twitter, type you question and add #twoogle to the end of it. Most likely someone will answer you!)

Some people to follow on Twitter:
Maths: @clarkformaths
English: @tejude @arjunbasu @FunDzaClub
History: @realtimeWWII (Livetweeting the 2nd World War, as it happens on this date & time in 1940, & for 6 years to come. <--- So cool!)


Important take-home message from this session:
Twitter is the way forward!
Seriously. It is the quickest way to share information.
I just went to twitter, searched for #mathchat, and from the tweets that came up, I've already found a really fun lesson idea, a site with maths videos, a website sharing worksheets/teaching resources, and some maths jokes (because everyone needs a laugh sometimes!).

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Back to Life

It's time to resuscitate this blog!


Do you know how many blogs there are out there that start off with a few posts and then just fizzle into nothing? You don't? Well, me neither, but I know it's A LOT! And right now our blog looks like one of those "failed blogs"...

But we can bring it back to life! And what better way than by sharing some feedback from a seminar on using social media in the classroom?

That'll be up in the next blog post!