where is technology in the common c ore s tandards?

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Where is Technology in the Common C ore S tandards?. Dr. Angela Gunter, NBCT Daviess County High School angela.gunter@daviess.kyschools.us. TECHNOLOGY. TECHNOLOGY. TECHNOLOGY. Literary Reading Informational Reading Writing Speaking Listening Language. TECHNOLOGY. TECHNOLOGY. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Where is Technology in the Common Core

Standards?Dr. Angela Gunter, NBCT

Daviess County High Schoolangela.gunter@daviess.kyschools.us

Literary ReadingInformational ReadingWritingSpeaking ListeningLanguage

TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

GOAL: To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technological society

Gather info and ideasComprehend Evaluate Synthesize Report

GOAL: To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technological society

Conduct original researchAnswer questions Solve problemsAnalyze print and non-print texts Create a high volume and extensive

range of print and non-print texts in media forms old and new.

In like fashion, research and media skillsand understandings are embeddedthroughout the standards rather than treated in a separate section.

The need to conduct research and to produce and consume media is embedded into every aspect of

today’s curriculum.

Demonstrator #1

Who is the audience?

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts: Writing

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts: Writing

It’s everywhere!

In ALL of the standards!

Technology is not found ONLY

in Writing Standard #6

WIKI (What I Know Is)Means “hurry” in Hawaiian language

r

Multimodal Personal Essay

Student Example

Book Review Podcasts

American Library Association Young Adult Library Services Outstanding Books for the College Bound and Lifelong Learners

Advanced Placement Summer InstitutesCollege Summer Reading ListsFormer Students (in college)

Categories

Autobiography/MemoirBiographyNature/Adventure/ScienceSportsHistory/Politics/WarTrue CrimeTravelogue

Authentic Consumers of Information

What blogs do you read? Iamboycrazy.com

Espn.com Himynameismark.com (bass player for Blink182)

Church youth group blog My Live is Average Rick Reilly (ESPN) Perez Hilton Hollywood 411 Katie Davis (young missionary)

Authentic Consumers of Information

What types of podcasts have you listened to?

Dave Ramsey Show Bungee (video games)

Mugglecast Oprah’s Book ClubBehind the Music Advanced SpanishBooks on Tape Car Talk (NPR)Pardon the Interruption (ESPN) The Onion

The Students’ Project

Activity Report

Podcast Stats (Last 30 days)

Episode hits 311 Subscribers 24 Site visitors 551 Comments 146

Catch-22

Fahrenheit 451

Catcher in the Rye

Constructive Comments

I thought your voice pacing was fine. I remember teaching this book in class when I was a student teacher, and the issue of “loss” was pretty dramatic and touching, and emotional for a lot of students.

Did you know that Katherine Patterson is the new Ambassador to Children’s Literature? Just a fact.

Thanks for your podcast. Mr. Hodgson, Sixth grade teacher

Comment by Mr. Hodgson — January 18 @ 6:05 am

Hi! I was particularly interested in listening to your podcast because I read Angela’s Ashes and loved the book, despite its sadness. Also, I had Frank McCourt as a teacher years ago. Thank you for capturing your thoughts about the book - hearing you speak about the book made me think about the parts I enjoyed most. I think I liked best Frank McCourt’s ability to find humor in what seemed like the bleakest of circumstances. It made him, as a character, seem resilient and not sad. Did you have a favorite moment or moments? Thanks again for your work on this and making it public to the world for all of us to enjoy!

Paul Oh, National Writing Project (former teacher) Comment by Paul Oh — January 19 @ 12:15 pm

Last year, I re-read Catch-22 several times for a class, and realized that the recurring motif of the tail-gunner episode turns the plot-line into something like a spiral, with each successive loop giving more information about the episode. Otherwise, the “novel” seems to be impressionistic, giving a series of character sketches loosely arranged around Yossarian’s military career, as you mentioned. I like your comparison of Catch-22 to The Office–clever!

Comment by Larry Barton — January 17 @ 8:54 pm

Suggestions for Revision

Allow more timeEliminate background noiseMore reaction/recommendation

than summaryAdd a common rating (out of 5 stars)Speak clearlyAdd rich details, adjectivesAdd quotes from the novelAttach them to card catalog in media centerAdd a brief music clip or appropriate background

musicInterview format

The World is Open: How Web Technology is Revolutionizing EducationCurtis J. Bonk

“Young learners currently are members of a participatory learning

culture who can and should be contributing to the knowledge-

building process rather than merely passively consuming prepackaged

information.”

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