Download - 21 st Century Notebooking
21st Century NotebookingUsing Wikis, blogs and word processing to enhance learningCreated and Presented ByJacob HaywardNorthwest Arkansas Educational Cooperative
Agenda
•Argument for using Notebooks
•Traditional Notebooking Organization
•21st Century Notebooking
Why Notebooking?
•Satisfy multiple requirements•Enhance student thinking and deepens
understanding• Improves students’ abilities to
communicate their thinking (Klentschy-page 2)
•Helps students connect content with real world or surrounding world (Klentschy-page 2)
•Encourages organization of materials
Notebook Structure and Organization
•My non-negotiables▫Table of Contents▫Page Numbers▫Vocabulary- Where to put it? As needed
when students encounter new terms or in a section dedicated to vocabulary
•Notable Mentionables▫Divisions of Content▫Line of Learning
Determine What to Assess-Taken from Barney Peterson & Anna Williamson
•Notebook format?
▫Text features Date Page number Table of Contents Charts, tables, graphs Labels Glossary
How I do my vocabulary- Four Square
WORDTextbook Definition
Student Definition
PictureSynonymAntonym
Can also do Flip books or word sorts/ vocabulary cards. - Ideas from SIOP model
Line of Learning- Taken from Barney Peterson & Anna Williamson•Ask students to draw a line beneath the
last line of text they wrote in their notebooks.
•Discuss the investigation they just completed having them use the reflections they recorded in their notebooks.
•Make sure important content comes out during the discussion.
•Record important information on the board during the discussion.
• Instruct students to add any information they don’t have in their notebooks beneath the Line of Learning
Line of Learning
Klentschy’s Notebook Organization
Element Evidence Student/Teacher Comments
Questions/problem/purpose
Prediction
Planning/procedures
Data/Observations
Reflection/Summary/Conclusion
“I Wonder” Questions
*
Rubrics• How will you assess?
▫ Overall notebook design▫ Specific assignments
• Summative vs. Formative
• Grade level dependent
Information on the next 5 slides is taken from http://www.sciencenotebooks.org/ & Barney Peterson & Anna Williamson
3 2 1 Table of Contents
I am very careful to record each
activity.
I am careful MOST OF THE
TI ME about recording.
I am NOT VERY CAREFUL and need to do a better job of
recording.
Drawing My drawings are labeled correctly.
My drawings have some incorrect or
missing labels.
My drawings are not labeled or the labels are
wrong.
Handwriting My handwriting is ALWAYS the best I can do.
My handwriting is USUALLY the best I can do.
My handwriting is sloppy.
Participation I work well with all my partners
ALL of the time.
I work well with my partners
MOST of the time.
I DI D NOT work well with all of my partners.
Materials I am ALWAYS careful with materials.
I am careful with materials MOST
of the time.
I am NOT careful with the
materials.
Assignments I ALWAYS complete the assignments.
I complete MOST of the assignments.
I have SEVERAL (3 or more) incomplete
assignments.
Daily Entries I ALWAYS put the date and page number.
I put the date and page number
MOST of the time.
I DI D NOT include the date
and/ or page number SEVERAL
(3 or more) times.
Blue – Student’s Self -evaluation Yellow – Teacher’s evaluation
Total Score: / 21
Student’s Name:
Primary Scoring Rubric*
*
Rubric for Content- SecondaryCriteria Meets Standard Comments
Format All required components included, in order• Date • Guiding Question• Student’s prediction• Materials list• Procedure steps • Observations and data (notes, tables, graphs, labeled diagrams)• Response to experience including further questions• Answer to guiding question
Verbal Description DetailedMost language descriptiveMost vocabulary lesson-specific
Make use of word banks generated by discussionUse word walls for definitions
Visual Description (diagram, table, graph)
Important parts labeledParts colored as requiredDetailed, accurate, and neatly done
Appropriate graph-labeling: title, increments, scaleScientific, not anthropomorphic
Quantitative Description Dimensions given in appropriate unitsColor compares to standardMost data points recorded
Standard or metric units according to grade-level requirementRealistic coloring for subject
Content Guiding Question answered Answer begins with restated questionAnswer includes evidence from entry data.
Notebook Rubric- SecondaryAn Organized Science Notebook Entry_____ Date_____ Guiding Question written as question_____ Prediction about answer to question_____ List of materials used_____ Step by step procedure directions_____ Labeled diagram that shows
procedure_____ Identify variable that is controlled_____ Identify variable that is changed_____ Identify variable that is measured_____ Data table _____ Observations_____ Conclusion based upon data and
observationsSuggestions for improvement:
Possible High School Notebook RubricNotebook Entry/Description Points
PossibleSelf Grade
Teacher’s Opinion/Comments
Table of Contents: Ordered, dated, page numbers, neat/legible
10
Overall organization: pages numbered, no scratch outs or scribbles (single line through
mistakes), no white out used, references listed on last page, titles and dates on each page (i.e.:
notes, video, lab title, etc)
10
Sketches: done in pencil or colored pencil, done in Petri dish sized circles, labeled, detailed,
magnification included, neat.
20
Notes and assignments for ______________completed. Detailed and
legible.
20
Lab grade: see lab report rubric for specifics. 30
Taking Notebooking into 21st Century
•Using Laptops/PDAs with internet connection to work with:
▫Word Documents
▫Blogs
▫Wikis
Word Documents
•Microsoft Word software
•Google Docs
•Penzu.com
•Etherpad.com
Blogs• What are they?
Site usually maintained by a person or organization Quick thought or sharing of ideas Many venues- sports, politics, articles, books, etc.
NPR
• How can they be used? ▫ Language Arts▫ Math▫ Social Studies▫ Science
Blogger.comEdublog.comMoodle.com
Wikis• What are they?
▫A website that one can create that is used to create a collaborative website for its users. (Taken from Wikipedia)
• How can they be used?▫Like a webpage▫Resource center
TIE CadreTechTalk
Some questions for you to ponder:
•On Notebooks
•On Technology
How will your notebooks look?• Table of Contents-• Vocabulary- make a separate section or place at
beginning of each entry when applicable?• How often will we use notebooks?• In science, will you separate Life Science, Earth
Science, and Physical Science?• How can you apply this to Language Arts, Social
Studies, and Mathematics?• What will your rubrics look like? • How will I grade them? All at once, rotation, peer-
to-peer, or combination of the above?• How will the piece on reflection look?
Technology
•How much accessibility to computers/internet do you have?
•What challenges do you currently have within your building? Your district?
• In what ways can you overcome/solve these challenges?
•How would you implement this? •How would you redesign your
lessons/activities to support this?•NWA Tech Talk
References
•Klentschy, M. (2008). Using science notebooks in elementary classrooms. Arlington, VA: NSTA Press.
•http://www.sciencenotebooks.org
•Vogt, M. & Echevarria, J. (2006). Teaching ideas for implementing the SIOP
model. Glenview, IL: Pearson Education