Monday, November 27, 2017

Final Reflection

Many of these websites and apps that I have blogged about were once just random tools that I would frequently hear about. However, I have really learned to understand how to use each digital technology tool and how to implement them into the curriculum so students start to become connected creators. I think that it is important that I demonstrate the different uses the tools have to assist students in their learning. I have enjoyed learning about the ways that digital tools can enhance the creative works of students and teachers. It has been interesting to learn all the various ways each of these tools can be used in the curriculum throughout all subjects.



Digital Tools That Excited Me the Most:
I am very excited about Flipagram. When I first used Flipagram, I was frustrated because I could not figure out how to use it and I couldn’t see how it was very beneficial for students. However, I continued to use it in my role as a teacher this year and realized teachers could actually use this application for a reluctant student. My student was not wanting to read his sight words, but I thought Flipagram would be a great way to motivate him to read them. He enjoyed being able to take the pictures of the words, set it to music and watch his creation. I loved being able to see this first hand as a teacher and see how it truly could be used to assist all students in various ways. I have definitely not perfected Flipagram, but I will continue to use it, when I am a librarian, and see all the great ways it can be used in a library and classroom. I am also excited about podcasts. This is a tool I believe that most teachers and students do not know about, or may not understand how to use. I can't wait to teach the school community all the creative ways and possibilities podcasts can be used in all the subject areas.

Digital Tools That Were the Most Difficult:
Infograpghics was the most difficult for me. Although it was not my first time using them, I still cannot seem to be able to think creatively and produce a well-designed infograpghic. Even with the different websites available to create them, I still do not feel comfortable creating an interesting informative infographic. However, I feel that they serve as a great way for students to actually stop and read information and text. I am not a creative person, and I feel that continuing to practice with infographics will enhance my creativity as it will with students.

Digital Tools That Will Most Benefit Students:
I believe that screencasts and Cartoons and Comics will benefits students the most. With screencasts, students can be the teacher and show other students various things they produced such as research findings, and anything else that they want to showcase on the computer. Cartoons and Comics are beginning to make their way back into the education world.  They are not new but the way they are being used is new to students. Students can use cartoons and comics in any subject area. For example: they can be used to teach sequencings in ELA, or a particular skill in math. The possibilities are endless which makes this tool beneficial to students.



I am very eager to teach the students and teachers about all these new digital tools, use the tools in the curriculum, and use them throughout the library as well. Learning about new tools that are always being created is something I will ensure I am consistently doing in my library. These tools can only enhance and benefit a student’s learning and a teacher’s teaching.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Podcasts

Podcasts are considered serial recordings. It is similar to blogging, but in audio form. Podcasts can focus on any topic or subject. They have become a popular digital technology toll used in the classroom. A few popular educational Podcasts are TED Talks, RadioLab, and StarTalk Radio. A challenge to be considered if creating a podcast is that it will be difficult for students to record their voice if they do not have a microphone or cell phone with recording capabilities. A recording device would need to be provided if students do not have access.



SoundCloud: I created a free account with this podcast website. This site was user-friendly and I was able to quickly upload my audio recording to SoundCloud. I recorded my voice using the microphone on the desktop computer. Once I saved the file to the desktop, I was able to upload the audio file to SoundCloud with ease, and gave the Podcast a title. I created a Book Talk Podcast on the book Deadline by Chris Crutcher.




Pod-O-matic: This site offers a free account, but it can be upgraded to the Pro account. The Pro account is a monthly free of $8.32 that allows 100 GB of bandwidth and 2 GB of storage. It was easy to set up an account and the fluidity of the site was easy to navigate. When students create their own podcast, Pod-O-matic shows the five steps the user will take to get their podcast published.





Podbean: I am fairly familiar with Podbean since I have used it before. Podbean is also straightforward like the other Podcasting websites. Students can sign up with their Facebook, Twitter, and Google account. Students can also sign-up use any email account as well. With all these different ways of logging in, adding a podcast into a blog or social media site is easy to do.




My favorite podcast website was Podbean. I enjoyed all three of them, but Podbean was the easiest to manipulate. These podcasting websites are a great way to engage students in their learning. Here are a few ways podcasting could be used in the library:

-Student radio shows
-Book talks
-Have students promote the library
-Create a current events newscast

-Students can interview teachers or new students


Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Cartoons and Comics

In the 1940s comic books were viewed as dangerous and were banned from shelves. However, comics are making their way back into libraries and into the hands of students. It has been shown by experts that comic strips and books support students with their literacy and overall love of reading. Many times struggling readers will turn to comics due to the easy-to-follow layout. I reviewed three different websites where students and teachers can create their own comic strip.


ToonDoo: This was a free website that simply required you to sign up. At first, trying to figure out how to get started was a bit confusing. Saving and sharing was easy for me to do. Once I figured out how to sign up and begin making the cartoon, it was a fairly easy process. One thing I thought was a great feature, was that students can read other users comic that they created. There are many options for the student to use to create the cartoon such as changing facial expressions. Because of this, I would recommend this for upper elementary students and older.

Here is my ToonDoo creation:




Pixton: I signed up for the free version. This site was very difficult for me to navigate and figure out. You are able to save, but I found that I also had to make sure to publish to save. There were many various ways a student could create their characters and comic strips. It took me quite some time to figure this website out and I still feel like I did not get a grasp on how to use more detail in my comic. Due to complexity of this website, I would recommend this for high school aged students.

Here is my Pixton comic:





Make Beliefs Comix: This site did not require any login to begin making this comic. There is no way to save the work and return to it later. It had to be completed in one sitting. This is something teachers need to be aware of with their class. This website was easy to use and fairly basic. There were not many options as far as characters and backgrounds. The website does have lesson plans and writing prompts teachers can access.This could be especially useful for younger elementary students.

Here is my Make Beliefs Comix:


After creating cartoons and comics with these three sites, I definitely enjoyed using the ToonDoo the best. Overall, it was user friendly, easy to use, and had many options to choose from. Here are ways teachers could use comics and cartoons in their classroom:

-Students create their own book
-Introduce sequential order
-Assist with vocabulary
-Students can practice their social skills
-Create an autobiography comic
-Students can learn literary devices such as setting, character, and plot
-For ESL students, comics can be used as visual aids

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Videos and QR Codes in the Library

The internet has become part of our everyday lives. We are constantly checking the internet whether it be looking up something, accessing social media, or watching videos on YouTube. Video messaging such as YouTube has become integrated in the way we run our lives. Typically people use YouTube for entertainment purposes, however, educators are using YouTube more and more to present, demonstrate, and share any videos they want. Many times, educators look to YouTube, as a teaching tool, to help teach a particular unit in class.
Here are a few YouTube channels from various libraries that show ways libraries are using YouTube.


Norman High School Library

This video is helpful to students because it explains to students how to access the library. This video would be useful to not only currents students, but new students and parents as well.



This video is one that students would like and have fun with. The librarian videos the mascot showing off different things a student could do in the library in a humorous and fun way.






The Unquiet Library

Finding and Using Wikimedia Commons Images: This video explain to students how to find free images that are not copyrighted through Wikimedia Commons. This will be a great resourceful tool for students when they are working on any assignment.









“Rocky Top" Performed at the Roots Music Club: This video consists on a band coming to the library to play. This is a fun way to get students engaged and interested in the library.






Pikesville High School Library

 

Pikesville High School FAFSA: This is an informational video reminding students to sign-up for FAFSA. This fun video grabs the student’s attention and help as a constant reminder to sign-up.
 



Wii Like to Party @ The Panthers Library: This is a video students would enjoy because it gives them an opportunity to relive the excited memories they made with their friends in the library.





BBMSMEDIA:

NoodleTools - How to use a pre-formatted database citation: This video shows how to use pre-formatted database citation. This would be helpful to students who are not yet sure on how to use citations.




Kids in the Hall - NIck's Director's Video: This is a fun and creative way to incorporate students into the school community. This is a great way for students to get to know their classmates they normally may not have met.






Library Use for Videos:

Animoto and YouTube are creative ways that can be used to promote the library. Here are a few ways that I can use:

-Create book trailers
-Showcase events happening throughout the library
-Library tours
-Showcase the Makerspace area
-Introduce the librarian

 


Book trailer:
I created this book trailer using the website Animoto. This was a very easy to use site that makes creating videos fun and professional looking. This site has many templates, videos and pictures to choose from. I chose this particular template because I felt it mimics the setting of the story. The book I created a book trailer on was I Was Here, by Gayle Forman. Once I created the Animoto video I was able to upload to my YouTube video and create a QR Code for students to scan and watch on their mobile devices.

I Was Here by Gayle Forman
Synopsis from publisher:

When her best friend Meg drinks a bottle of industrial-strength cleaner alone in a motel room, Cody is understandably shocked and devastated. She and Meg shared everything—so how was there no warning? But when Cody travels to Meg’s college town to pack up the belongings left behind, she discovers that there’s a lot that Meg never told her. About her old roommates, the sort of people Cody never would have met in her dead-end small town in Washington. About Ben McAllister, the boy with a guitar and a sneer, and some secrets of his own. And about an encrypted computer file that Cody can’t open—until she does, and suddenly everything Cody thought she knew about her best friend’s death gets thrown into question.







QR Codes:
I absolutely love QR Codes. I use them all the time, whether it be in my personal life or at school. The use of QR Codes in the library are endless. Ways I would use QR Codes in the library is by providing QR Codes to access:

-Book trailers
-YouTube Videos
-Documents from the library such as a newsletter
-Directions on how to access various things in the library such as the copier
-Link to the library website
-Link to funny video or pictures helping to understand the Dewey Decimal System

Almost anything that you want patrons to have access to, a QR Code can be generated for it. QR Codes can be a fun and engaging way to get students to visit the library, become familiar and comfortable with it.

 

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Screencasts, Instagram, and Flipagram

Screencasts, Instagram and Flipagram are three different ways students can present, or share, their work or projects in their classroom. To create a Screencasts, students can use the website, Screencast-o-matic. This is a website where students could explain a project, on a computer, they created to present to the class. Instagram is a social media app where students can take pictures and short videos to share their work with friends, family, and other classmates. Flipagram is another digital media sharing app. Students can take pictures of something they created from start to finish, and present it in a way where it looks like a movie.



Screencasts: A screencast is a website that records what the students are doing on the computer screen, and it also records their voice. Screencast-o-matic is the screencast website I used to create a screencast. Screencast-o-matic was simple to use and very user friendly. This website is free, but only allows a certain amount of screencasts with the free version. If the students want to record their voice, they need to make sure to have a microphone. Screencast-o-matic also allows for various ways to create your screencast, such as, a YouTube video, a movie file, or upload it to the Screencast-o-matic website.





Instagram: This social media app allows students to take pictures and video and upload them on the app as a "post”. They can add filters, text, music, and other creative things to enhance their post. This is a free app and users can add friends on the app to see their pictures and videos they post. This app also allows for students to create a live video. This pictures I took on my Instagram account are of “Fall” displays from several grade levels and departments at the elementary school. Here are a few posts from my Instagram account: (kxs056) https://www.instagram.com/kxs056/
A post shared by Kelly (@kxs056) on

A post shared by Kelly (@kxs056) on




Flipagram: This is an app that students can download on their smart phones. Flipagram is an app that can be linked with Instagram. Being a novice with Flipagram, it took me several tries to figure out how to use it. This was harder to use than other digital media sharing apps and programs. Students can create movies out of pictures they took and add music, text, and other filters to make the movie more exciting. Here is my Flipagram account: https://flipagram.com/kkstarr2219




The one that I enjoyed working with the most was Screencast-o-matic. I appreciated the flow and ease of use when I was making the screencast. As I was creating the screencast, I thought about the various ways I could use this currently in my classroom for the students. A screencast is something I could also create to show parents how to access certain websites to assist their child in their education. There are many reasons why you could create a screencast.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Infographics-Graphics is the Way to Go!

An infographic is a visual representation of data and information. It is an easy way to make complicated data into easy to understand pictures and graphics. Infographics are useful in the library because it catches the patron’s eye and interest more than a poster or worksheet with information and data printed in essay form. This is a great way for students to present research, as well.

 Easel.ly- This is a site where students are able to create visually appealing infographics. Students can use pre-made templates while changing the look of the template. Digital media can also be used in the infographic. I enjoyed this site, but even though it was user-friendly, I believe the available options were overwhelming for a novice user.


Infogr.am- This is a free website that allows students to create charts, pictures and graphs. Students can import data from Google Sheets and Excel. This was an easy to use site, with a simple interface. I was able to navigate Infogr.am fairly easily, but the site did not have as many options as other infographic sites.


Piktochart-This is also a free site to create infographics. Piktochart has a limited number of options when selecting a template. Students can import Google Sheets and Excel charts into Piktochart as well. This site also gives the user the option to embed a video. Out of the other sites I explored, this was my favorite site to create an infographic.


Below is an infographic I created using Piktochart.

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Facebook Pages and Twitter


Facebook
Facebook is a social media tool that connects users world-wide. Users can post information they feel their followers need or should know. An advantage to Facebook is that the site gives users a place to look for current information that may be happening in their library. Users are able to private message the administrator of the page, and it allows for the administrators to put contact information and a Google map of the library of the school. One other advantage is that most of the time users that comment or share a post in some fashion have a direct relationship to the page. A disadvantage of Facebook is that many times posts can get lost among other posts. Another disadvantage is when a user sees a post that may be of interest to them, then they go back to try and find that post, you have to scroll through the entire page to find it.

I searched “school library” and not many showed up, especially elementary schools. Eventually, I found and followed Pasadena High School Library in Pasadena, Texas, and Moore Elementary School Library in Houston, Texas.

Pasadena High School Library in Pasadena, Texas
https://www.facebook.com/PHSLibraryTX/
-Many of the posts were about community events.

-There were also posts about student achievement within the school.
-Other posts were about book suggestions, deals available, book reviews, and movie trailers from books.
- I did not see any comments on any of the posts.

Moore Elementary School Library in Houston, Texas
https://www.facebook.com/moorearmadillolibrary/

-There were many posts about news within the district, such as Hurricane Harvey updates.
-Some posts were shared from the district’s Facebook page, about Hurricane Harvey.
-One post was a shared Instagram post from author Steve Swinburne.
-A few posts were inspirational quotes.
-One post that was of interest to me was from the Hurricane Harvey Book Club.

Twitter
I am new to Twitter, but I have started to become fairly familiar to it. Twitter is another mega social media site. Users from all over the world can connect and follow people and organizations that are of interest to them. An advantage to Twitter is that the posts are up-to-date and current. The posts are also more concise. I feel with Twitter, the content is more to the point and not clogged up with advertisements and extra stuff like games and random invites. Some disadvantages to Twitter is that it is more of a global connection, and not as geared towards connecting with friends.

Kathy Schrock @kathyschrock
Schrock is an education digital tech guru. She is a leader in the digital tech world. She is very active on Twitter. She tweets and retweets mostly about useful apps, digital hardware, helpful informational websites on technology, and ideas that can be used in the library. She also refers to her blog in her tweets. Schrock tweets about her speaking appearances as well.
Linda Braun @lbraun2000
Linda Braun is a former president of YALSA, and a teen advocate. Based on Braun’s Twitter, I noticed she retweets various links from other websites quite a bit. A few of her tweets were about coding, and others were about events or programs taking place in the library world.
David Warlick @dwarlick
Warlick is a former educator and enjoys exploring the educational technology world. The most current tweets are videos about of a tribute to his father’s passing. Other tweets were YouTube links of aerial views of a drone video, and a video of photos from 1997-2014.

Gwynth Jones @GwynethJones
Jones is a librarian and a certified Google Innovator. She has a link to her blog on her Twitter page. Jones tweets and retweets quite a bit on Twitter. She posts mostly pictures and links that have information related to students in her school. On her blog, she posts helpful educational technology tips that will help teachers, librarians, and parents.

Jim Lerman @jimlerman
Lerman is a teacher, author, and speaker. He tweets and retweets quite often as well. His tweets and retweets direct you to his Scoop.it page. He tweets about creative ideas that can be implemented in the classroom and library. Some of his tweets were about infographics, tools for creating unique images, and creative resources.

Final Reflection

Many of these websites and apps that I have blogged about were once just random tools that I would frequently hear about. However, I have...