Greetings,
This past Monday was not only my oldests birthday, she is 25 now, but was also the start of another 8-week class. I am very excited to start on a new two classes.
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Sunday, October 27, 2019
#6710 Module 7, Assignment 7
The Evolving
Role of the Teacher
6710J:
Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society
Module7 –
Assignment 7
Angela Williams
Walden
University
Kathryn Arnold
EDUC
6710J
Understanding
the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society
October 25,
2019
Module 7 Assignment
The Evolving
Role of the Teacher
The resources and activities along with the media presented to
us in this course have helped me to broaden my outlook on what technology can
be in the classroom. From my experience, many teachers do not embrace
technology beyond what they are presented in the curriculum. This could be
because they are afraid of technology, their schools do not allow or encourage
using new and additional technology or for reasons unknown.
I am a personal blogger and I never thought of using it to reach
my students until this course. The same goes for Twitter and Instagram. It was
a venue I did not think about. Using any social media or mass communication
will be difficult to work into my classroom use due to requirements and
expectations set by my district. The district does broadcast news via Twitter,
Instagram, and Facebook, but teachers and staff are prohibited from reaching
students in any of those ways. With approval though, I am looking forward to
creating connections via technology with my students.
One of the first applications I would like to expand on is using
course/classroom blogs and Wikis with my students. Chapter 3 in Blogs,
Wikis, Podcasts (Richardson, 2010) and the activity of creating our
educational blog and the Wiki lesson was very nerve-racking at first but very
enjoyable by the development of it. I was more nervous presenting it to my
students that I was creating it (the wiki) for my students.
Because of what is at stake, my student’s education, I
experience what many students may experience. ‘Despite the enjoyment of the
project, some students from all three groups expressed feeling a high level of
stress.’ (Pletka, 2007) I have been that student. I have found in the last 8
weeks bout technology is to go forward learning. I will be taking the knowledge
from this and future courses to my classroom and students. Something I love
about high school is that when you are honest with your students about what you
know and that you are learning or will learn with them. They appreciate the
honesty, most students do, and in my short experience, I have even had students
help me find the answer.
For example, in our Wiki Lesson students were happy to look at something
new and not the online textbook. A challenging behavior student was completely
engaged in the lesson. She moved from the Wiki to the online text and the
provided websites checking my facts and find new information. By the end of the
class she told me she wished more lessons were a puzzle like this, it kept her
intrigued. This was a big compliment to me from her, in ten weeks of school she
has maybe spoken to me twice before.
During this course, I have investigated my own school district's
website. I have attempted to match what I am learning to what the District is
advertising that they are into promoting. I was very happy to see that the
promotion and statement involving ISTE (Riverview Gardens School District,
2019). There is not a date as to when this statement was added to the District
page, but it is encouraging about the direction we are headed and that they
understand that technology is our children’s future, regardless of career and
the educational path they take beyond high school.
The hurdles that may arise about living up to the ISTE standards
for teachers and students hopefully will not be many. I know one will be to
convert the district approved web texts to Wiki Lessons and without having the
access to Google Classroom as a tool. What I can do to overcome these, and
other constraints will be to do extensions of lessons in Google Pages as a Wiki
and with District approval, a classroom Blog. Anything that is done on the web
needs to have District approval. I will continue to get that approval.
An ISTE Standard (ISTE, 2019) that I will be impressing on both
myself and my students is as a Digital Citizen. Students not yet understand how
much responsibility there is to be a good digital citizen, neither do some
adults. It is so easy to think and act like whatever is done on the web in this
Web 2.0 society is not harmful. I observe daily students not being good digital
citizens. This is possibly the most important standard for me.
Over the next 2 years, I have two SMART goals to master and put
in place to transform my teaching and my classroom. SMART goal S for Specific and
R for Relevant (Education, 2015a), (Walden University, 2019).
Being specific with your teaching is crucial to giving correct information.
‘The more specificity you bring to your goal, the clearer it is.’ (Walden
University, 2019)
The SMART goal, relevant, is my second personal goal. ‘This
criterion ensures that the goal is important to you right now, at this point in
your life.’ (Walden University, 2019) I chose this goal because of the
relevance to my education and my student's education is extremely important to
me right now. What I am learning, and teaching is important right now. I
believe we need to stay relevant to all our goals.
I plan to accomplish these goals by being reflective in my
teaching and learning daily. I will work at keeping my introduction and
teaching specific and not get off the mark and following my lesson plans
without deviation. I have 90 minutes at most to get the meat of a lesson to my
students and out of those 90 minutes, I should not be lecturing for more than
20 minutes. Being specific and relevant is crucial.
So far in my courses, experience, and future interests, I have
been exposed to concepts that can assist me in aligning my teaching career and
my MSED specialization. Those concepts are, but not limited to current
experience, my courses at Walden University, specifically this course in
Technology. I chose this course study because of my observations in education
in just 4 years. Where I worked previously there was a lot of talk about
technology in the classroom. I found it to be talking, what was being promoted
was not being practiced.
Technology will only grow, and our students need to know the
basics and the specifics of navigating the technology they will be exposed
to.
** Comments from
Instructor addressed
Angela, it is great all that you are getting
out of this course. I am unclear if you included SMART goals. I know you
discuss them, but I could not locate actual goals. Each goal must include all 5
elements. There is an example below. Kathryn
SMART Example:
By May 2020, 90% of my students will
post one blog post per week (with at least 3
paragraphs) addressing the prompt they are provided.
Was this addressed?
·
As a result of your experience in your
courses, consider how the topics and concepts covered might align with an issue
that you might want to study. This should be a challenge or issue in your
professional practice that poses a dilemma. Remember, it must be something over
which you have control, impact P–12 student learning, and be related to your
MSED specialization. What is a topic you might consider developing into a
research question for an action research project for your upcoming major
assessments?
With my original document, I was unclear on my SMART Goals. I would like to address my mistake here by
setting some SMART Goals for myself as a reflection of my own educational work.
S – Specific
By November
2019 I will review all of my educational work to meet an 80% or higher with correct
detail in my writing.
M – Measurable
I will cross
check my documents for submission not only through Grammarly and other
available sources like Walden University Writing Lab. This goal will be measurable through a lack of detected
errors.
A – Attainable
Through time
management and support I am more than capable of attaining the grade I desire
and can achieve.
R – Relevant
My goals are
relevant (and important) to me. I have
set a goal of participating in the accelerated Graduate program and graduating
with my Master’s Degree on time.
T – Timely
This goal is
attainable in the time limit of the program, provided my performance in the required
courses are adequate and that I complete all required criteria for graduation.
References
Education, L. (Director). (2015a). Are Your Goals
S.M.A.R.T.? [Motion Picture]. Baltimore, MD.
Education, L. (Director). (2010). Teacher as
professional: The teaching profession [Motion Picture].
ISTE. (2019). ISTE: Standards for Students.
Retrieved from ISTE: https://www.iste.org/standards/for-students
Laureate Education, Inc. (2015). RWRCOEL Technology
Proficiencies. RWRCOEL Technology Proficiencies. Walden University.
Retrieved from https://class.content.laureate.net/2565b7a77954cee53d16c82a78cc0726.pdf
Laureate Education, Inc. (2016). RWRCOEL Professional
Disposition. RWRCOEL Professional Disposition. Walden University.
Retrieved from RWRCOEL Professional Disposition.
Pletka, B. (2007). Educating the Net Gerneration. Santa
Monica, California: Santa Monica Press.
Richardson, W. (2010). Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other
Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms. Thousand Oaks: Corwin, A Sage
Company.
Riverview Gardens School District. (2019). Digital Age
Teaching. Retrieved from Riverview Gardens School District:
http://www.rgsd.k12.mo.us/?PN=Pages&SubP=Level1Page&L=2&DivisionID=7747&DepartmentID=7649&PageID=23135
Walden University. (2019). ASC Success Strategies: SMART
Goals. Retrieved from Walden University:
https://academicguides.waldenu.edu/ASCsuccess/smartgoals
Reflection Revision MD6Assgn
Master
of Science in Education
6710J:
Understanding the Impact of Technology on Education, Work, and Society
Module 6 & 7 – Assignment 6
Angela Williams
Walden University
Kathryn Arnold
EDUC 6710J
Understanding the Impact of
Technology on Education, Work, and Society
Integrating Technology Into the Classroom
Pre-Implementation: Instructional Design Template
For this lesson in
Personal Finance, focusing on banking with checks, the Missouri State Standards
were the primary focus for lesson content.
The technology used will be compared with the ISTE standards in this report, also.
A
brief explanation about the Missouri State Standards for Personal Finance. Like many states, Missouri was not happy with
the proposed and mandated standards by No Child Left Behind (NCLB). The state education system with Government
approval has adjusted the required teaching standards across all subjects and
in both elementary and secondary education.
In the case of personal finance, the new standards to be followed became
affective with this school year, 2019/2020. (DESE, 2019) In a turn of events, the Standards
do not include the State's written curriculum.
This lesson includes past and current standards.
Instructional
Plan 6710:
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Standards Addressed
List
the standards by including the state, number of the standard(s), and a
description of the standard(s).
|
Concept 2: Choice and Decision Making
Competencies: Money Management (MM) 8
Theme and Objective IV: Banking Services
(DESE, 2019)
|
|
Other
ISTE:
3 – Research and Information Fluency
ISTE: 6 – Technology Operations and
Concepts
(ISTE, 2019)
|
|
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Learning Outcomes/SMART Goals
|
Students will learn objectively
the use of and the importance of using checks and comparing banking services regarding checking.
|
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Learning Objectives (at least two)
|
By the end of the lesson students
will be able to know the components of a personal check and will be able to prepare a check themselves.
(Ryan, 2016)
|
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Bloom’s
Revised Taxonomy
|
☐
Remembering: the parts of a check.
☐
Understanding: the need for using personal checks.
☐
Applying: able to complete a check.
☐
Analyzing: able to distinguish a correctly written check from one that is
not.
☐
Evaluating: able to justify when writing a check is needed.
☐
Creating: able to create and manage a check register.
|
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Real-World Contexts
|
Students will learn about personal
checks and when to use them. Discuss why paying with a check is safer than paying cash for some purchases. Learn the differences between a personal and company check or if there are any differences.
Students will write checks for goods and services as a learning tool. Students will evaluate their use of checks and receive critique on their skills of filling out a check.
Students will learn to complete a check register for all written checks.
Discussions of why keeping a check register are important not just for
checks but for all purchases.
|
|
1.
PLANNING
|
|
|
Collaboration
|
Collaboration with other
Personal Finance faculty. Shared ideas of introducing extensions (like this wiki-lesson) to keep students engaged.
Collaborating faculty provided suggestions to the lesson, suggesting that it be an extension to the standard curriculum and text. The discussion continues about setting up students with a banking professional for them to interview. This would change the lesson suggested an extension to a homework assignment.
|
|
3.
MATERIALS
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Materials
Used
T
= FOR TEACHER
S
= FOR STUDENT
Include at least
one digital material.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
These
materials are the best choices for this lesson and class. The lesson is web-based. Blank dummy checks and check register for real-life experience.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4.
ASSESSMENT/EVALUATION
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The
above assessments are directly from the district approved curriculum. They
are mandatory for assessment and grading purposes.
How does the chosen assessment(s) help
you determine if your students met the goals/objectives?
The
assessments are designed with critical thinking skills in mind. They will assist the instructor in knowing where to reteach should mastery not be achieved. By reviewing the pre-assessments
from all students’ misconceptions will be found and can be addressed and/or revisited in the lesson.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
How will you use this assessment data
to inform your instruction? Use current literature (within the last five
years) to support your rationale.
Through review and revisiting, data educators can determine where their teaching needs to be adjusted for student understanding. (Haley-Speca, 2016)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5.
LEARNERS
|
|
|
Differentiation
Address multiple intelligences
and/or learning styles when writing your response.
|
How will you differentiate the curriculum to meet diverse student
needs? List and explain at least two ways that you differentiated the curriculum to meet diverse student
needs.
1. Reading portions of the lesson
can be read (via podcast or vlog) to the student.
2. Additional time can be allowed
for completion of any out of classroom assignment to accommodate the student’s ability to find an interview subject.
3. Accommodations will always be
made according to a student's IEP or 504 documents.
|
|
How will you differentiate instruction to meet diverse student
needs?
List
and explain at least two ways that you differentiated the instruction to meet diverse student needs.
1.
Students grouped by knowledge of the subject. Students that have shown competent knowledge of the subject in the pre-assessment can be grouped to assist students that need support in their understanding.
2. Students may continue their research
through extended learning and multiple approved sources and extension lessons.
|
|
|
How will you differentiate assessment to meet diverse student
needs?
List and explain at least two
ways that you differentiated the assessment
to meet diverse student needs.
1. Assessments are written on the
focus of student learning. Valid and
relevant to the subject questions will be directed to the student.
2. Clearly articulated learning
goals are given to the student and followed by the instructor. Students that are not given clear goals of the assessment are possible to perform poorly. We are educators for success,
not to set our students up for failure.
|
|
|
5. LEARNERS
|
|
|
Diversity
|
How will
you address the needs of diverse students (e.g., IEP, 504, readiness level,
cultural/linguistic background)? Choose one diverse population and explain how you addressed their special needs.
Needs
of diverse students will be addressed by following the recommendations and requirements of a student’s IEP, 504, readiness level, cultural/linguistic background are met. Needs could be in seating, assistance by an aid, providing breaks. Reviewing all documentation that pertains to the student to assure the educator is adhering to all legally stated accommodations.
Students
of a community or a family group that does not have experience in the subject or topic being taught will need additional exposure to the subject. This exposure could occur through virtual field trips, physical field trips, guest speakers brought in to the classroom or reading assignments.
|
|
|
|
|
Student Work Samples
**NOTE: see appendix for
additional photos
|
Pre-Assessment
work samples:
![]() |
Post Implementation Essay and Reflection
Implementation of the
lesson was received reluctantly at first by students, but in the end, it was well-received. Due to constraints that were
present and out of this teacher’s control, one of two classes were able to
participate in this lesson. The class is
the largest of the two classes, is comprised mostly of female students from
Sophomore to Senior grades. Students
were engaged with the knowledge that they could print out some of the material
to work. In the district curriculum, this
is not something that they can do, work is all done on the computer, but without print capability. Many students also
enjoyed that there was a handwritten element to the lesson.
Scaffolding for
students started at the beginning of the semester. Students have been working on web-based assignments
and are comfortable with using computers and web-based lessons. Prior to this wiki-lesson, students completed
a guided lesson on the computer from EverFi/Enterprise Banking. This provided program is designed to support
any Personal Finance lessons. The lesson
provided is audio and read by the student, with an assessment at the end.
Based on the
assessments (see appendix) that students hand wrote, the initial introduction
and resources in the lesson were well received.
When students were asked for their honest reflection of the Wiki-Lesson,
verbal input from them was from “it was okay” to “I enjoyed the resource links
and the information.”
From the desk position
of the instructor, computers can be seen, and student activity can be
monitored. Students were observed using the links as intended and looking at
the resources. Students stated that
these links helped them to understand the material that has been read in past
lessons and the information in this lesson.
When asked if the information and the lesson could help them in their
preparations for college or in a career most students said yes. One student said that she now understood her
paycheck more because she saw the connection and the similarities between that
and a personal check.
Data was collected in
written and printed material, completed by students. Information and reflection were also
collected by a verbal poll of students.
This lesson was shared with co-teachers as well. One teacher that is open to new forms of
presenting information to students asked permission to use this lesson in his
class when he reaches this point in the curriculum.
In this lesson and
others, technology is the primary medium to present lessons to students. The standard curriculum for this course is
almost 100% web-based and for many students is stale and not very
exciting. It involves reading the text on the computer, answering the assessments online in the same software package and the
teacher getting access to the assessment results. Instruction needs to be varied and if the
curriculum is all web 2.0 based, then how it is presented needs to be altered
for variety and interest.
Elements of this lesson
that will assist students in their college and career readiness are built into
it. One element is the discussion and
resources about how important checking is.
As stated earlier, checks are not used often in today’s technology-based
world, but they are used. Students need to know how to read, complete and cash
a check for the times that they are used. Another readiness skill is how to
fill out a deposit receipt. When asking
students prior to the lesson if anyone knew how to fill out a deposit slip, the
class was split almost 50/50.
Students see themselves
very skilled in using technology.
During this lesson, some students did not understand that they needed to
sing into their Google accounts to access the lesson. This reminded students that computers are
different than access information on their phones. This lesson helped students to remember that
in this 21st-Century technological world there are still protocols
to access sections of the internet and sections of a learning package.
Needing to navigate to
the Wiki-lesson caused students to problem-solve about how to access the
lesson. Again, students are used to
being given the endpoint to going to a web or intranet-based lesson. This lesson challenged students to use their
critical thinking and problem solving about how to navigate to the lesson. Some students needed to be reminded of how to open
the link to the printable documents in the lesson. Using lessons like this helps students to
problem-solve about how to use a lesson set up like this one was.
Changes I will implement this lesson as I move forward will add more interactive components. Interviews
as podcasts from experts in the field are a consideration. I am considering a
research component that students will locate a valid source of information, and
then post the information to a class blog.
By researching and sharing valid information to a group, this is also
preparation for college and career readiness for when collaboration on a lesson
or a work project is happening.
As an educator, I
collaborate with colleges. We critique
lesson plans and presentations together, whether that is in person or via
technology. For this lesson, I did collaborate
with colleagues. I shared aspects of my
work from concept to the final product, asking for input. I was (am) willing to share and collaborate
with others, but I was disappointed in how little my colleges did respond to my
request for collaboration. One colleague
stated that she did not have the time or the interest, that she was only
interested in the provided curriculum. Another colleague offered suggestions. One suggestion was to make it all a read-only
by the students, without a podcast or documents to print. They were looking for a piece that held no
interaction between subjects and students.
In closing, I would like
to talk about the knowledge I have gained while in this course and the exposure
to ISTE standards. Every lesson I write
and teach I think about how it relates to what I have been exposed to in this
course and others I have taken toward my Graduate Degree. I look critically at these lessons about how I
add components so that my students are exposed to the ISTE standards. I know there are more components and a lot
more for me to learn about integrating technology to my classroom. As I write my future lesson plans that have
21st Century Technology components I will be referring to the ISTE standards
for both students and teachers to make sure I am satisfying them in those
lessons.
**Note: The references
listed below are pieces that assisted and used in writing the above Instructional
Plan. These items were also very helpful
to me through this course.
References
DESE.
(2019). Missouri Learning Standards. Retrieved from Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education State of Missouri:
https://dese.mo.gov/college-career-readiness/curriculum/missouri-learning-standards#mini-panel-mls-standards5
Education, L. (Director). (2010). Teacher as
professional: The teaching profession [Motion Picture].
Haley-Speca, M. A. (2016). Research for Better Teaching.
Retrieved from RBTeach.com: http://www.hsredesign.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Using_Data_Formative_Assessment_St.Ignatius_MAHS_Oct2016.pdf
History of Banking. (n.d.). Retrieved from History World: http://www.historyworld.net/wrldhis/PlainTextHistories.asp?historyid=ac19
ISTE. (2019). ISTE: Standards for Students. Retrieved
from ISTE: https://www.iste.org/standards/for-students
Laureate Education, Inc. (2015). RWRCOEL Technology
Proficiencies. RWRCOEL Technology Proficiencies. Walden University.
Retrieved from https://class.content.laureate.net/2565b7a77954cee53d16c82a78cc0726.pdf
Laureate Education, Inc. (2016). RWRCOEL Diversity
Proficiencies. RWRCOEL Diversity Proficiency. Walden University.
Laureate Education, Inc. (2016). RWRCOEL Professional
Disposition. RWRCOEL Professional Disposition. Walden University.
Retrieved from RWRCOEL Professional Disposition.
Richardson, W. (2015). From Master Teacher to Master
Learner. Bloomington, Indiana: Solution Tree.
Ryan, J. S. (2016). Managing Your Personal Finances
(7th ed.). NY: Cengage Learning.
Appendix
Student Samples

Additional to
Lesson: Extension and Additional Information
Technology Integration: Keep in mind
that as you locate and use websites, updates can change links and availability
of information. Check any website you plan to use BEFORE sending students to
it.
• School counselors have probably been giving aptitude and
achievement assessments throughout the students’ high school time. Often this
includes a career component that students can access online.
• Search a variety of web sites for job descriptions,
potential openings, salary projections, regional differences in salary and cost
of living.
• Keyword searches (may need to go through a finance link or
real estate link using a selected location on your search engine): salary, careers,
cost of living, employment forms.
• E-mail or interview a person in the career area student has
selected.
• Possible web sites:
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Voice Thread MD6 Assignment
This was a lot of fun. In Voice Thread I uploaded the documentation for my Personal Finance's semester final project. I have recorded...
-
Secondly, This is a link to a Scholarly paper on Social Learning. I think if you liked the video you will also find the information in...
-
In this course, EDUC 6771: Bridging Learning Theory, Instruction, and Technology (Self-Directed version of EDUC 6711) I am continuing ...
-
I am a little out of practice when it comes to many things. One is writing an APA paper for my education. I submitted the original of what...
