Showing posts with label Student Voice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Student Voice. Show all posts

C.L.A.I.M. Your Lessons to increase Critical Thinking


Bitmoji ImageCLAIM stands for Complex, Liberating, Authentic, Intriguing, and Meaningful.

This is a simple lens through which teachers can quickly analyze their unit plans to move towards Project Based Learning with a standards-based focus.

The goal is to redefine the tasks students are asked to perform and to organize them into a coherent, action-oriented goal that requires loads of critical thinking (and hopefully the other C's as well!) The desired result is to increase their engagement, improve their learning, and better prepare them for the future.

Or, in simpler terms, it's a great way to spruce up those old, dusty lesson plans and help students plant seeds of change.

Here's a breakdown of what C.L.A.I.M. stands for, and why each is an important component to curriculum design. Do your units meet these criteria?

Complex

Definition: A diverse set of skills is needed to complete these tasks, and the skills required extend beyond content knowledge.  

Why? Our world is full of complex problems that require complex solutions. This means problem-solvers must take into account several factors, many of them potentially overlapping or conflicting, to satisfy all requirements. Think beyond the content. Does the problem involve economic, political, or social implications? For example, comparing soil samples in Science class is hands-on, but fairly simple thinking for a 7th grader.  Designing, funding, and convincing administration to install a community garden while using soil analysis to make crop and fertilizer choices - that incorporates math, science, reading, speaking, and technology skills, while also considering society, economics, and political savvy - now that's complexity.

Liberating

Definition: Students are free to take diverse paths to solve a problem, and each student's solution may look different.  

Even when student solutions end up similar, their approach and supporting details can be different. Just asking students to design or develop a solution isn't enough - we have to guide them. But we have to do so without scripting the solutions for them.  Be careful your supports don't turn into shackles, that long directions don't become directives, and that you don't require a crippling number of criteria. I've seen over-scaffolding turn a promising project into a glorified fill-in-the-blank exercise.  Let your artists paint freely. Green light them to take risks and fail spectacularly.

Authentic

Definition: Adults in the real world can get paid for doing the tasks you're asking students to do.  

Does that seem like an unusual definition? Well guess what - it gets no realer than bringing home a paycheck for your work!  Obviously you have to adjust for the age of your students, and smaller learning tasks can build up to a larger end goal. But if the big picture project that they are working on doesn't scale up to something worthwhile in the adult world, then ask yourself - what career skills are you really preparing them for?  Solving equations is a math skill, but without context, it becomes busy-work drudgery. Learning how to use algebraic equations to compare cell phone plans and pick the more cost-effective device, carrier & contract? That's something middle and high schoolers can relate to. And as an adult, so can I.

Intriguing

Definition: A curious person might take on these tasks - just because.

If you had to sell tickets to your class, would anyone buy them? If students were free to leave any time and go to another class... would they stay?  Pose interesting challenges, provide intriguing tools, and surprise yourself with the engagement you see. Writing another essay is only slightly more exciting to students as having to grade 125 more essays is to you.  Producing a video on a topic is more intriguing - both to create and to assess.

Meaningful

Definition: Someone in the real world might benefit from your students doing these tasks successfully. 

What's the number one question students ask - in their head, or out loud - especially your hardest to reach students - as soon as you announce an assignment?  "WHY are we doing this?"

Teachers, keep it real - how many times have you asked that same question while sitting at a meeting?  Nobody wants to engage in meaningless busy work, especially not just to appease someone else. So give students a problem to solve that has meaning to them - and the real world.  Don't just have students memorize our constitution - have them create a Bill of Rights for the student council to ratify. First, get them to care. Then attack a real problem. Real meaning, real challenges, real solutions.

Now let's be realistic.

All of your lesson plans aren't going to satisfy all 5 of these criteria. Not every time. Even some of your best projects may fall a short in one area. And that's OK. As long as you are looking through this lens as you design your student projects, you will be headed in the right direction.  Small changes, compounded over time, lead to big results.

Flipgrid Flips the Script

(Originally published July 2018)

My favorite video response service has unlocked ALL features for educators for FREE!


My Tech Coach partner @DanaWeber615 and I have created a few resources to get you going.  They are posted as Google Docs so they can constantly evolve - just like you do!
  • Ideas & Inspiration: Not sure what to use Flipgrid for? How 'bout... EVERYTHING! Here's a list of our favorite uses that integrate well with what you are already doing in your classroom.
  • Tips for First-Timers: Here are 10 Tips for a successful first Flipgrid experience, based on our implementations in K-8 classrooms!
  • Scaffolding for Shy Students: Contrary to popular belief, not all students are immediately excited to post videos of themselves online. If you've got shy or hesitant Flipgridders (or if you are one yourself!), here are some tips to scaffold students.

I knew a change was coming.

The intense (and pretty expensive-looking) marketing campaign. The roll out of  Certified Educator and  Ambassador programs (which I fully love and support, by the way!). The announcement that a big change would be announced in August.  After getting teachers across the district excited about Flipgrid and all its potential...  using it in classrooms, staff meetings, new teacher trainings, and the summer enrichment program...  finding great ideas for use in classrooms from ELA to ELL to PE....  I made a bold prediction about one of my favorite apps to my partner Tech Coach:

"Flipgrid is going paid this summer."

I was so sure.  Just weeks earlier, my beloved Padlet announced they were restricting the number of boards users can create for free, and adding several tiers of paid account types for their platform.  This came shortly after they suddenly added a buffet of new options - embedded video, audio, drawing, and many more formats - that turned it into a tool that could literally do anything. I had just started supporting teachers in Pad-casting, Digital Lit Circles, and Book Studies via Padlet, when WHAM - they went paid. So I was convinced that Flipgrid was building up to releasing an awesome new array of options - that would all require a teacher, school, or district paid account. I can truly say I'm happy I was wrong.

While many Ed-Tech services 'went paid' in the past school year,
Flipgrid flipped the script by going Free in 2018. But will it last?  

If there was one common Ed-Tech trend in 2017-18, it was digital tools "going paid."  For most services this meant switching to a "Freemium" model: offering limited use for free, but charging for the good stuff - managing a roster, unlimited lessons, collaboration options -  the things that make it a fully functional tool for a teaching team.   First it was Thinglink removing the ability to manage student accounts for free. Or course there's the aforementioned Padlet.  Book Creator even managed to launch their Chrome web app and start charging for premium  features within this year.  And let's not forget our sad farewell to the past decade's best backchannel chat,  TodaysMeet.

The explosion of 1:1 devices and Web 2.0 services in the past 10 years is starting to remind me a lot of the dot com boom in the early 2000s...

While schools have scrambled to roll out devices and reliable internet connections, EdTech startups have churned out amazing free services that many teachers have come to depend on. But just like those dotcom companies quickly learned, at some point you have to monetize your service. As hard as it is to tell a teacher, "Sorry, this isn't free to you anymore," it's also understandable that a business needs to at least be able to pay the bills if it wants to stick around.

And that's why I'm still a little leary about how Free "Free" will be in the long run.

Don't judge me Flipgrid, I've been hurt before (ahem, Padlet). But I am not convinced that all the features will be free forever.  I can't even imagine the cost of the server space needed for the millions of videos that are sure to be posted in this school year alone, let alone the other costs of hosting, managing, and marketing the service.  Of course, a behemoth like Microsoft can float the costs for much longer than an independent startup could - they are even refunding teachers who paid to upgrade before the announcement! But as Google continues gobbling up a larger share of the education device and software market, how does Microsoft plan to leverage Flipgrid into a profitable stake in EdTech ? With that said...

I still stand by my prediction that Flipgrid will evantually go paid - or at least 'Freemium' - but exactly when and how it will look is unclear.

For now, let's enjoy the free ride while it lasts and give our students voice, choice, and 4C skill development.  The previously 'premium' features you can now enjoy include:
  • Unlimited Grids
  • More choices of response times (30 seconds up to 5 minutes)
  • Custom Feedback based on a rubric
  • Co-Pilots (more than one teacher managing a grid)

Step Outside the Slides - 5 Alternatives

"We love Google Slides, but we need something new."
I hear this a lot from teachers. Presentations are great for students to demonstrate understanding while practicing speaking and multimedia skills. But you can only grade so many Slides / Powerpoints / Prezis before they start to blur together. These tools are FREE, flexible, easy to learn, and [BONUS!] use Google Single Sign-on.

1. Screencast Those Slides!

Change is hard, and takes time. So if you're not ready to dive into a whole new platform, have students amp up their Slides / Powerpoint presentations by Screencasting them. Students click through their presentation on-screen, and use an app to record their screen along with their audio narration. They can then turn in a video file that can be shared with classmates, the entire grade level, or parents.

Mac users: Quicktime is installed on your devices!
Windows, Chromebooks: Use the Screencastify Google Chrome Extension or Screencast-o-matic.

2. TourBuilder


Create interactive tours with integrated views from Google Earth (including Street View). These geography-enhanced presentations have a familiar Slides-like layout.  Per slide, enter a location, dates, images, video, links, and text. Upload media, integrate your Drive account, or perform in-app Image & Video searches. Perfect for (auto)biographies, timelines, storytelling, and event recap.

But wait, there's more! Have students screencast a walkthrough of their tour!

https://tourbuilder.withgoogle.com/


3. Adobe Spark

Narrate a movie in a few clicks! This tool is intuitive and simple. On each "slide," include 1-2 pics or a video, and a limited amount of text. Then, record up to 30 seconds of audio per slide. There are a few simple templates for themes, layouts, and fonts, but they're limited - and that's a good thing. No obsessing over styles, no text-heavy slides. Students must be selective with their media choices. Create symbolic, meaningful imagery with succinct, powerful descriptions. BONUS: background music!

https://spark.adobe.com/about/video


4. Student-Created Padlet

A dynamic, flexible, open canvas for short bursts of text, images, links, videos, and audio recordings. Students can post to a shared board, or create their own boards. Become podcasters, bloggers, vloggers, content curators, meme generators, quote collectors, and more! Boards can have password protection, moderation, and Google-style read/write control.

www.Padlet.org.


5. Chatterpix Kids

This iPad app lets students choose an avatar to do the talking for them. Record 30 seconds of audio, which is read by a picture of your choosing - complete with animated mouth. Save the video to your camera roll for easy sharing. Middle School students can work in teams, recording separately and
then using iMovie (or another movie editing software) to mash up the recordings into a single video.

Find it in the iTunes App Store