Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.-- William Butler Yeats
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Not with a Bang, but a Whimper: The End of Print?
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Virtual Reports on Real Books: Goodreads.com and Book Reports in the Digital Age
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Prezi: Reinventing the Wheel

Social media is an amazing first step in cultivating the classroom without walls, and Prezi is a fantastic social media tool.
For years, I’ve searched for the perfect presentation program—one that allows me to quickly put together an introduction to a unit for my students, but also something that was, unlike PowerPoint, dynamic. I wanted a program that would allow me to connect with my students outside of our classroom.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t hate PowerPoint, I just find it strangely complicated and difficult to make interesting or interactive. For group projects, you are limited to one person working at a time, and often, the file is too big to email. And forget doing a project quickly; it sometimes takes hours to upload pictures, link videos, or create slide transitions.
Like many other educators, I’ve waited for something new to wow me, and finally, this summer, another teacher mentioned Prezi.
I even liked the name…Prezi. It sounds modern, hip, Apple-esque. And it is all of those things. I still remember the reaction I had the first time I viewed a prezi; my jaw dropped. I couldn’t believe how incredibly visual and seamless it was! In fact, it’s the first presentation software I’ve used that caters to the visual / kinesthetic learner.
Not only does Prezi look amazing, but it is a cloud-based presentation tool! That means that you never have to email another file to your students; you can simply direct them to the website (if you make your Prezi public); in fact, you will be able to watch the file on any computer or tablet anywhere. Another perk of cloud-based presentations is that your prezi is saved somewhere other than your computer’s hard drive, clearing up much-needed space and protecting you against accidental deletion.
Perhaps the most valuable feature of Prezi is that it allows students to interact with lessons on their own time, in their own space, while fostering the collaboration that we all like to see. The “meeting” option allows up to ten people to login and work on the same presentation—even at the same time.
At the private college prep school where I teach, we currently have over a hundred boarding students who live in a dorm off campus. It is often difficult for these students to work on projects with our day students, and as I like to assign a variety of cooperative learning projects and assignments, I’ve been very frustrated with PowerPoint.
Our school, like many others, faces a new challenge—providing web-based networking tools to our students and instructors. Prezi is an answer to that challenge. For example, just last week, my juniors were working on literary criticism projects. Most of the groups were made up of both day and boarding students, and Prezi made it possible for them to all meet online and build their presentations without even being in the same building!
Key features of the software:
1. It’s free for educators, as long as you have an email address that includes your school or district name.
2. It’s free for your students to use (there is a free non-education version available as well).
3. It looks crisp and modern; it emphasizes the visual.
4. It uses a zooming tool (which awes your students).
5. There are no complicated menus, just one wheel of options (I call it the “Wheel of Awesome”).
6. Every single addition of text, picture, video, or object can be done in less than two or three clicks. (For the designers out there, you can go five or six clicks to specialize your prezi.)
7. You can import your old PowerPoint files.
8. You can change the path (order of “slides”) your prezi takes at any time.
9. You can make your prezi public and share it with the world or make it private for a select audience.
10. Youtube videos can be inserted by copying and pasting the address.
11. You never have to leave the prezi to open another window, unlike PowerPoint.
12. Your students can find your prezi by typing your name into the search bar of the website!
Before you race to type “prezi.com” into your browser, I have a few suggestions
1. Forget everything you learned using PowerPoint. (It only confused me when using the software.)
2. If you want to add text, just click anywhere on the screen.
3. Mac users zoom in and out using the two-finger scroll method. Click and drag to move the screen around. I had a rough first few minutes trying to learn this!
4. If you want to change, move, manipulate, rotate, or re-size text on the screen, click on it once until the Wheel of Awesome pops up and use the menu on the wheel.
As we begin to change our curriculum and delivery to meet our digital-native students’ needs, Prezi will impress where other presentation software falls short! It will promote differentiation, cooperative learning, lesson sharing, and social networking. Not only will students and teachers be able to build their own dynamic presentations, which they can share with the Prezi community, but they will also be able to use others’ prezis as teaching and learning tools.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Essential Teaching Protocols for 21st Century Learning
In this blog post for Meritas, I discuss how I incorporate the four essential protocols.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
It’s a party—BYOD!
Monday, April 2, 2012
The Tortoise and the Hare—Social Media Can Differentiate the Course

The amazing thing about social media in the classroom is that it engages all learners. That’s right, I used the word-that-shall-not-be-said—“all!”
From students who excel at class discussion to the shy turtle who never sticks his head out of his shell, sites like Twitter, Goodreads, and Facebook have the ability to grab every student’s attention and give the tortoises a chance to speak out.
Having shy students in class isn’t uncommon, and it is easy to lose them in the marathon. Our turtles are sometimes easily stressed, afraid to put themselves out there, and often resistant to group activities, preferring to stay in the warm cozy safety of their shell instead. What social media is capable of doing is minimizing the stress of being vocal in a class full of peers and giving these shy kids a voice, something that lies at the very heart of differentiation.
True differentiation, tailoring our teaching to meet the needs of the individual, happens when educators utilize social media. Differentiating the learning environment, the content, the process, or the products by making use of some of the free media sites available can help instructors reach every learner. And because our classes are designed with the traditional model of teacher as architect of the track and students as runners, differentiation is the key to keeping each member of the class on pace and striding towards the finish line. Perhaps the trick is for those of us setting the route to make it a fair race or to consider encouraging the students to help with design of the course. Social media can be instrumental in doing this.
The following three free user-friendly social media websites can help to differentiate with your tortoises and hares. I’ve included a few ideas to start your track design!
TWITTER
What to assign?
1. Posit a question relating to the material from that day—English: What did you think about Dante’s journey into the second circle? What might his meeting with Francesca symbolize? History: If you were fighting in the Battle of Hastings and could text message, what would you report back home to your family and friends? Science: In the experiment today, how did the results of your lab differ from a classmate’s? Math: How can the equation we learned today be used in a real-world setting?
2. Have students tweet as a favorite author, scientist, historical figure, mathematician, or character from a book. (See my “To Tweet or Not to Tweet” article for my personal experience with this assignment.)
3. Ask students to tweet a current event that applies to your field of study. For example: This week, find one event in the world where advances in technology are being questioned or scientists are being called irresponsible.
In giving Twitter a try, I learned that tweeting removed inhibitions while providing additional time for my students—specifically, my shyer students—to design their responses to our discussions. Both my cheeky little rabbits and my quieter tortoises took more time planning what to write, the end result being better posts and better grades. I would also like to mention that as with any social media site, especially those that are public, caution and etiquette are keys to a successful experience
What to assign?
1. English or History: Ask students to create pages for characters from a book you are reading in class and to have conversations, post pictures or videos, and follow the events of the book (via the timeline). I use this with my Hunger Games unit, and my students adore writing as Katniss, Peeta, and Gale! Social studies or history teachers could also assign novels as a complement to their textbooks and require the same.
2. History or Science: Ask students to create pages for scientists or famous historical figures and have conversations, post pictures or videos, or even debate via the timeline. Try having science students create a page for a late scientist and have that figure respond to what is happening in his or her field today. (English teachers could have students select different authors and imagine conversations between them—this would be great to teach tone, diction, and style.)
3. Drama: Have students create a page for the character that they are playing in a production. The characters can interact, and students will have a better understanding of the role that they are playing. Again, tone, diction, and style can be part of the assignment guidelines.
GOODREADS
Many may not be as familiar with this website as with other social media sites. A quick description: Goodreads provides a place where users can catalogue the books that they have read, are reading, or would like to read. Users can write reviews for books, create bookshelves for different genres (or classes or groups), and share their favorite works with the online community. This is a great resource for modeling and promoting independent reading.
What to assign?
1. How do I start?
It’s easy! Go to the website you’ve chosen, make an account. Next, ask your students to make accounts and to follow or friend you. Follow or befriend them. And Go! I would also suggest a rule about not “friending” others outside of the class and making all pages private—this will help control access and privacy; however, in the case of Goodreads, communicating with others outside the class may actually be of greater benefit to your students.
2. How do I evaluate this type of assignment?
Create a rubric which evaluates frequency; quality of their posts, tweets, or reviews; adherence to the assignment guidelines; effort; and creativity. You may also want to consider retweets, friend requests, or other ways that the students interact.
Ultimately, educators have the difficult, if not impossible task, of employing a variety of styles and methods that reach their students, and using a social media extends the classroom discussions and activities outside the walls of the school, providing both the tortoises and hares with a learning environment that inspires creativity and higher order thinking. With our increasingly technologically savvy students, it is getting more and more difficult to keep up with the online trends. But if we can, then our growing children who spend the majority of time online will benefit from it!
Special Thanks to: Jennifer Howard and Randie Johnson, my math/science and English gurus
Photo Credit: Jason Salerno
Should Students Need a Driver's Permit to Cruise Social Media?

Let’s imagine. Your daughter is finally sixteen and you bought her a car for her birthday. As you watch her close the door and fasten her seatbelt, you say those two little words… “Go on.” Now, you and I both know that you didn’t give her any lessons or hire her an instructor. In fact, you forgot to have her take the driving
test.
Is this responsible of you as a parent?
Of course it’s not. It’s ludicrous. But the funny thing is that this is what we are doing with our children and our students. We are giving them the most amazing vehicle—technology, but we are forgetting the importance of safety education and teaching them how to both “drive” these devices and navigate this information highway.
Let’s face it—cruising the web, especially social media, is sometimes as dangerous as driving a car, but prohibiting the use of social media doesn’t stop it; it only makes it more dangerous because it becomes secret. As educators, we must begin to instruct our students in proper driving technique and etiquette.
Speaking of etiquette, those of us in education need to review safe practices as well. Taking the car analogy a step further, most teachers would never find themselves alone in the car with one of their students; in today’s lawsuit-happy world, we should avoid any situation where our word is up against that of a child in our care. And just as we would not get into a car alone with a one of our students, we must not enter into a social relationship online—no private chats, private Facebook messages, or personal non-school related emails. There are ways to interact, yet we must use them carefully and publically. We must be wary and we must be wise. But we also—MUST.
Today, with budget cuts, the internet is one of our greatest resources, especially with textbooks, podcasts, and youtube videos all for free. There’s Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, and so many networking sites that are just waiting to find a place in education. The world is at our fingertips, in our smart phones, tablets, and laptops, and most of us are finding that simple words on blank pages no longer cut it. We are trying to drive our beat-up VW Bus in a stock car race. We aren’t going to win.
The good news is that the racetrack hasn’t changed; education is still about engagement, pure and simple. Students who are interested learn; students who are bored don’t. There is a place for social media in our classrooms, just as there is a place for iPads and smart phones.
The key for us as educators is to balance innovation with safety.
We shouldn’t have to ask who’s driving the VW bus? None of us should be—we need to meet our digital-native students where they learn best. But we also should not have to wonder if the person driving the stock car has a license either—let’s teach our students to drive safely.