Tag Archives: sandbox session

Webcams and Virtual Field trips: engagement and real-world connections!

“Incorporating webcam images into a curriculum expands the tools educators have to help explain ideas and concepts to students. Webcams can be used as a teaching tool, with images and data from the webcam sites incorporated into a teaching module, emphasizing a concept or point. Webcams can also be used in an exercise, where students find webcams from different parts of the world that fulfill a set of criteria set by the educator.”

(Sawyer, Butler & Curtis, 2010)

There has been a great deal of research on the value of connecting students to the natural world. The BCEd plan advocates experiential learning and many publications expound the impact of time spent in nature on the health and well-being of both children and adults. While taking students outdoors as often as possible is inarguably the most valuable form of field experience, webcams and Virtual Field Experiences can provide an alternative when this is not possible. Webcams can also be used to supplement an ‘actual’ field trip and support ‘real time’ data collection in the classroom prior to, following or in lieu of a field experience; to pre-play or re-play the opportunity.

For many teachers, taking students outside of the immediate local environment is difficult if not impossible. While many recognize the value in even accessing natural areas if they exist within walking distance of the school, field experiences (even a walk down the block) can pose barriers to teachers (geography, safety, scheduling, financial issues, permissions and district or school policies to name a few). Virtual experiences like webcams (or interaction with experts via web conferencing as a virtual field trip or even via social media), can eliminate these barriers and the instantaneous, multi-modal nature of the interaction helps to make the experience particularly relevant to learners today (Prensky, 2001).

Having students interact with natural environments and people via webcam allows students to see beyond the school walls even when they are confined by those walls. Real-world experiences, even those mediated by digital technologies such as web-cams, increase student motivation, engagement and learning at all grade levels (NREL, 2005). Further, while being immersed in natural environments is superior, simply viewing nature in images or video can improve mood and lessen anxiety (Louv, 2008).

While the concept of viewing nature videos or participating in virtual field trips is not new to teachers, the increase in number and quality of live streaming webcams combined with increased access to technology in schools, make the potential for this sort of observation more accessible.


There are so many potential uses for Webcams & virtual tours in the classroom. From geography to science to critical thinking, storytelling, problem solving and observation. From whole class engagement, to small group, to individual and even ‘passive’ observation where the ‘cam’ is left live on the projector for students to observe as desired or as needed. Webcams can be part of a learning center or approach along with hands-on manipulatives, magnifiers, measuring tools, books, writing and drawing materials.

See this link for a list of some of our favourite Streaming WebCams for elementary and secondary students.

Download a Sandbox_WebCams_handout

In this edutopia Article, learn how Webcams can “bring lessons to life”

http://www.educationworld.com/a_tech/tech/tech100.shtml


star-fish-242886_1920A favourite experience with my own students was a unit exploring extreme environments. We connected with Ocean Networks Canada, http://www.oceannetworks.ca/, viewed their webcams, collected data and then participated in a ship to shore Skype with an educator aboard a research vessel 100’s of KM off the coast of BC. The students were highly engaged, developed excellent questions for inquiry and did some very creative problem solving – areas each of the core competencies were easily explored in this one unit! Communication, Thinking and Personal Social.

The Vancouver Aquarium has a variety of webcams and teaching resources at vanaqua.org. They also offer Virtual Field Trips (Free in the pilot year with a fee of approx. $60 per class of any size beginning in Sept. 2019) Contact: https://www.vanaqua.org/education/school-programs/virtual-aquaclass (and let  them know you heard about these experiences via UBC’s Faculty of Education Scarfe Sandbox)


A few Tips

  • Know your objectives!
  • Pre-view and pre-test the webcam
  • Have a back up plan – what will you do if the webcam isn’t active or internet is too slow (have students engage in something related – having a ‘sketch journal’ can support effective use of downtime!)
  • Ensure your display is clear and large enough – is there sound?
  • Have students develop questions prior to watching, while they watch or after watching. Can we ‘answer’ our questions (i.e. research) by observing?

Additional Resources:


References:

Butler, D., Curtis, M., & Sawyer, C. (2010). Using webcams to show change and movement in the physical environment. Journal of Geography, 109(6), 251-263. doi:10.1080/00221341.2010.506924

Louv, R. (2008). Last child in the woods : Saving our children from nature-deficit disorder. Chapel Hill, N.C: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.

Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory, (2005) Focus on Effectiveness. Retrieved from http://www.netc.org/focus/challenges/student.php

Prensky, M. (2001). “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants”. On the Horizon 9 (5). Lincoln: NCB University Press.

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Ozobot: Smart and social robot

Ozobot is a miniature smart robot that can follow drawn lines or roam around freely, detect colors and can also interface with all the popular programming languages (especially Python), and it has Bluetooth for downloading programs! With Ozobot students will have hands-on opportunities to learn about robotics and programming while working on STEM/STREAM (Science, Technology, Reading, Engineering, Arts and Math) applications.


Ozobot is a simple and fun way for kids to learn about basic or advanced programming and coding practices.

With Ozobot, students from kindergarten to grade 12 can begin learning about the realm of robotics. Ozobot allows students to create routes or adventures for their robot with colored markers and codes. In fact, students can begin learning about robotics using the colored markers and then advance into coding as they begin to understand the programming process. Ozobot is thus an excellent tool to use in STEM/STEAM classes to engage and inspire your students!

By using the mat that comes with the Ozobot Evo Education Kit, teachers and students can observe how this smart and social robot reads and interacts with different circumstances. In this case, you can use the Evo app to control and monitor your Ozobot Evo by designing custom blocks and building a sequence of events.

Check out the Teacher’s Guide to explore some ideas on how coding activities can be integrated into the classroom.


All Teacher Candidates can sign out a kit of Ozobots from the Education Library to use in their practicum classrooms. Visit this catalogue to view when the kits are available and to sign them out.

Before you look for resources, figure out the model of your Ozobot – Bit or EVO

Next, choose how you want to introduce the Ozobots to your students. 

  • Are you going to play games that don’t require the Ozobots first?
  • Are they going to practice drawing lines and following their own pathways? USE THIS CODES CHART
  • Are you using the app to have students block code instructions?

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Reference
Ozobot teacher’s guide. (n.d.). Retrieved May 15, 2017, from http://files.ozobot.com/stem-education/ozobot-teachers-guide.pdf

Colour Codes Bot Camp (August 2018). Retrieved April 11, 2018, from https://youtu.be/uRsFoAX4rGA

Ozoblocky Bot Camp (August, 2018). Retrieved April 11, 2018, from https://youtu.be/mHAJgIFlfGM

 

Images obtained from https://ozobot.com/press-kit 

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Camtasia EDCP Assignment – Marina Milner-Bolotin

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From EDCP website

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For this assignment you will be using Camtasia software available for free to all UBC students through CONNECT to create educational videos through editing available raw science teaching videos. Videos will be housed on the STEM Education For All Youtube Channel.

For your video please follow the assignment checklist:

  • UBC signature video in the beginning of video.
  • Project signature slide followed by filled out video topic slide (exported as images from the PPT template).
  • Acknowledgements slide at the end of the video.
  • Use the “Fade” transition between slides and video.
  • Use the soundtrack provided as background music for the slides (audio was downloaded from PremiumBeat.com and does not require attribution).
  • Annotate (using callouts, arrows and lines) the raw video to emphasize key terms, concepts or elements.

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There are many outstanding educational STEM videos available on YouTube and other online sites. These videos are great teaching resources for you and your students. They are especially valuable for flipped classrooms that are becoming more and more common in British Columbia and around the world. As a 21st century teacher you will want to create your own videos that address the needs of your students. A teacher who knows how to create his or her own educational videos using a video editing software, such as Camtasia, has a very useful skill under their sleeve. The goal of this workshop is to introduce you to Camtasia so you can become such a teacher.

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    1. For this project many of you will be using lab computers, but you can replicate this process on your personal device.
    2. Locate your movie file (if you are using a file created by Marina, select one from folder “Camtasia Workshop Dec. 2016” on the desktop of the lab computer and open the file “Camtasia Movie List”.

      1. Choose the topic you will be working on and locate the associated video file in the folder “Raw Videos for Camtasia Movie List”.
        • Prior to starting your presentation, view the raw video and make note of important vocabulary (consider ELLs as you do this).

      1. Additional files needed for producing the video can be found in the folder “Files for Camtasia Production”. These include the UBC video Brand Tail, PPT template and music file.
        • Open the STEM Video template and customize it for your video / topic (insert images/video screenshots into image placeholders).

      • Export your PPT slides as images in .png format

      1. Change project screen dimensions to 720p HD (1280×720)

      1. Import all your media (video, audio and images) into Camtasia.

      1. Add media to timeline. Note: keep different media file types on separate timelines for ease of editing.

      1. Annotate your video using callouts, arrows and lines.

      1. Save your final work.

    1. Click on the SHARE button to Export your file as a video in .mp4 format.
    • Name your file (see example on whiteboard for naming protocol)

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Live Binders – resource sharing

Digital devices connected to the virtual cloud

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Live binders is a platform developed to support curation of resources. Using ‘binders’, teachers can virtually create and share their own resource repositories, texts and lessons/units. You can visit ‘Livebinders’ – scan them or create your own binder of resources that you can share with others.


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LiveBinders allow teachers to create an online collection—paperless, aka go green!—of teaching materials, whether these are websites, presentations, multimedia, Google Docs, you name it! These can then be accessed from any browser and updated on the go. There are many other potential applications, such as classroom material for a substitute teacher, notes and resources for parents, student projects, portfolios, the list goes on.

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Visit http://www.livebinders.com/ and browse through the online collection for some inspiration. Then create an account, a new binder, and start inputting your own resources. These can then be used privately or shared with the world.


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Blogs and Social Media – Blending social & academic worlds

Businessman | Hand drawing social network

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Social Networking, defined by Gunawardena et al (2009) as the “practice of expanding knowledge by making connections with individuals of similar interests” is a potentially powerful tool for both Post-Secondary Faculty and the K-12 classroom teacher. Through this networking, students are afforded the opportunity to co-create knowledge within a Community of Practice (Wenger et al, 2002). Further, a recent study conducted by Junco et al (2013) found that “the design of teaching strategies and practices related to virtual engagement and collaboration is instrumental to achieving positive educational outcomes (when using Twitter)” (p.285) and that instructor participation was one key to successful implementation and an increase in student engagement.


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Considering Blogging or other Social Networking to enhance teaching and learning? Learn more by downloading the handout. You might also visit this Resource Blog I’ve set up with tutorials and tips for teacher and professional blogging using WordPress/UBC Blogs.

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Questions to consider:

  • What is the purpose for your use of social networking technologies?
  • Do you wish to moderate a discussion?
  • Do you plan to infuse it into various aspects of class?
  • Student sharing of their insights, reflections
  • Co-creation of content or ideas?
  • Sharing of links to content, references, resources
  • Connection with the greater community? Experts?
  • How involved do you wish to be?
  • What affordances and level of control do you need or require?
  • How public or private do you wish this space to be?
  • Can you adjust privacy settings of your chosen digital technology?
  • Will students want or need access to this space after the course is complete?

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Some places to start:

Blog: Consider setting up a classroom blog where students can reflect on discussion questions, key concepts or images. Consider providing students with their own blog space within the classroom space where they can extend their learning, upload assignments, share their own ideas, thoughts, creations.

UBC Blogs – WordPress

kidblog.org a simple site for student blogs; teacher can set up accounts; no identifying student info or emails required!

Wiki

  • Online encyclopedia
  • Crowd-sourced information and content co-creation
  • Constant evolution/revision
  • May have ‘editors’ to verify content

UBC Wiki

Curriwiki

Wikipedia

Discussion Forum

  • Group discussion forum
  • Often ‘closed’ or invite only
  • Threaded discussion on a topic(s)

Test out the Discussion feature of your LMS – Connect

Micro-blog

  • Traditionally shorter entries than a typical blog
  • Most micro-blogging platforms have word count or character limits
  • Often sharing quick snapshot, link or image

Twitter


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Content creation and curation

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cc flikr stream: suttonhoo22

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Content creation for educational purposes differs from our usual understanding of content creation for the web. We have to take into consideration that the audience is no longer a faceless public, but rather a classroom of learners and parents. So although we are creating shareable and editable videos, images, text, presentations and so forth, you might not want to use the same software used for a primarily web audience. The resources presented here have been selected for their educational value.


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There has been an increasing shift over the past decade in the use of digital devices and media towards creation, storage and sharing and away from simple consumption. Given the many user-friendly digital tools now widely available, so-called amateurs are now in a position to unleash their creative genes and produce content like never before.We are “now able to create, capture and store an ever-increasing amount of digital information about or for themselves, including emails, documents, portfolios of work, digital images, and audio and video recordings, and can edit, share, and distribute them easily over the net via blogs, personal webpages, peer to peer networks, or shared services”.

As a result of this phenomenon, there are now a proliferation of on-line spaces where individuals and groups can create, co-create, save, store and share their work; a few of which I will share here today.


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Of course, here at UBC, students and faculty have free access to UBC Blogs and UBC Wiki for content creation and storage but there are many more spaces ‘out there’. Take a moment to check these and others out out. Find a space that works for you or share your own favourite space by commenting! *while all of the applications listed below have some kind of free access, these are not all ‘open’ resources.

  • Interested in digital storytelling? Find some cool tools and share your stories at 50Ways to tell a story.
  • Self-publish your own digital children’s books for FREE ePubBud
  • Store and share your own teaching resource ‘binders’ (basic membership free) at LiveBinders
    *Visit this pbworks wiki page for an introduction to livebinders.
  • TeachAde is an online community for educators that allows lesson storage, sharing and discussion – a potential commmunity of practice
  • Pinterest is a space where you can store and save images for inspiration or use.
  • Teachertube allows users to upload educational video content – this site tends to be ‘free’ of the type of ads found on other popular ‘tube’ sites (IMHO, a ‘safer’ bet for housing and displaying content for students!)
  • While Edutopia doesn’t afford the ability to archive your own material readily, you can access a variety of resources, blogposts, articles and even join the conversation in their blog space.
  • TeachersNet allows you to share your own ideas, learn from others and participate in dialogue through chatboards.
  • Participate in the co-creation of knowledge on Wikieducator which also allows you to save ‘books’ of content
  • See this list of Top 10 Social Network sites for teachers… more on this later when we explore Personal Learning Networks!
  • iTunes U houses free educational/academic content. You can even create and share your own course! See this tutorial.
  • Feeling really brave? Try creating or co-creating your own course – MOOC – see this guide for a  how to on mobile moocs.

*Please note that most spaces (with the exception of UBC blogs/wikis) are housed on American servers and, in accordance with FIPPA, you may not upload and share student content or images without explicit permissions.

**Always check copyright and attribute where needed before sharing content you didn’t create yourself!


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Creative Commons Image Search

Taking and editing your own photographs can be a challenging, yet rewarding way to enhance your web spaces. Further, this virtually eliminates copyright issues! Still, if you are looking for web content you can use, here are a few places to look:

Creative Commons Image Search NB: you still need to be aware of licensing requirements and generally attribute the work to the author. ALWAYS read and learn before you use!

Public Domain Image Search *always check the image sources and ensure the image is in the public domain.

  • Wikipedia Public Domain listing – fairly comprehensive
  • Pixabay – allows immediate sharing to various social network sites including Facebook and Twitter. Some high interest and high quality images. Many are free with no attribution required. This site also links to high quality stock photos you can pay to use.
  • UnSplash – high resolution photos, free to use (even commercially) no attribution required (always appreciated though)
  • Burning Well
  • freefoto.com  is one I like to use with younger students when developing digital stories or web-based projects
  • http://www.public-domain-image.com/
  • Various governmental sites offer high quality images – always attribute source and note any special licensing requirements in their FAQ or About pages. These can be particularly helpful for Science and Social Studies!: NOAA photo library (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) ; US Library of Congress ; NASA ; Archives Canada ;
  • Open ClipArt
  • PDPhoto.org  – free public domain images

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