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Inquiry Blog Post #4: Empowering Readers Abroad and at Home

Photo: iStock by Getty Images

Research

As a starting point for this week’s research, I turned to the literature generated by scholars through the UBC portal.  An article that was particularly helpful was, Mobiles for Literacy in Developing Countries (Wagner, Castillo and Murphy, 2014). The focus of the article was compiling reviews of organizations that were reaching into disadvantaged communities and attempting to improve their situation by simplifying their access to literacy technology.  The non-profit organizations highlighted utilized strategies ranging from getting books into the hands of children who have varying access to education in their communities, supporting students with hearing disabilities, and connecting communities of women who are trying to make money to support their families and send their children to school.  The authors were reflective as they highlighted the good that can be done through the organizations that it reviewed but it also kept asking questions about the potential damage of this kind of work:

“The prospect exists for technological developments to offer innovative tools that help meet the goals of improving education, reducing poverty, reaching gender equity, and improving child and maternal health. Or, those same developments could create new disparities between rich and poor countries and communities.” (Wagner, Castillo and Murphy, 2014).

The more I thought about this inquiry dive, the more I felt cautious.  We have to be so careful about who we place our trust in and what organizations we throw our support behind.  I have had some bad experiences in the past because I was ignorant of some facet of a charity I was supporting and then 5 years of We Day’s left an unpleasant taste in my mouth

This article, of course, is almost 10 years old, so some of the information and organizations were outdated or have since changed course.  An important piece that I took away from my reading was that it is no longer enough to create opportunities for smiling children holding mobile devices and pass it off as education or real change (Wagner, Castillo and Murphy, 2014).  In this day and age, 10 years after this article was written, we are living in an even faster digital age where we are constantly bombarded with problems and seeming solutions in the form of curated photography.  This article provided a warning that, as educators, we always need to do our homework and make sure the organizations we get involved with are ethical.

All Children Reading

One of the organizations I discovered, that is still in operation, is All Children Reading.  The mission statement at allchildrenreading.org is, “advancing EdTech innovation and research to improve reading outcomes for marginalized children in low-resource contexts” (allchildrenreading.org, 2022).  They strive to achieve these aims by providing free access to digital libraries through three different apps: Deaf World Around You, Let’s Read and Global Digital Library.

Deaf World Around You kind of blew my mind.  The e-books that are offered can potentially be translated into 28 different local and national sign languages.  To the best of my understanding, if a child in Somalia needs a story translated into their local form of sign language, they can adjust the settings and a person will appear beside the screen and translate the story for them.  The translator is also, as far as I can tell, a member of that child’s culture, so they immediately see themselves mirrored in the story.  When I changed the setting to Samoan, a Samoan man appeared on the screen to translate the story.  As I said, mind blown!  The disadvantage that I noticed was that not every language had stories that were available, so there is still work to be done.  This one really got me excited though and it confronted my ignorance about ASL and how, in my ethnocentric view, I thought that was a standard for Sign speakers around the world.  This is terribly foolish of me, I see now, but I am nothing if not always learning.

With free e-books for children from different cultures and written in under-served languages around the world, Let’s Read Asia has nearly 10,000 e-books and audio books that are available in at least 2 languages each. The books are organized into 15 categories such as, Science, Mighty Girls, Community, Folktales, Problem Solving and Critical Thinking to name a few, for free.  The issue of equitable access becomes less significant as long as there is some form of digital device with wifi available to a family or classroom.

The other app that is also open-sourced and is called Global Digital Library and it is similar to Let’s Read but it also includes a focus on mathematics as well.  The collection is very impressive and I was so pleased to see many primary level resources that address positive actions we can take to take better care of our planet and address the issues of climate change.

1000×5 – Victoria

The issue of being helpful or harmful to countries that we are trying to support with donations looms large in this topic.  I definitely donate weeded books to the Salvation Army but there is another local organization that our school has been partnered with for over a decade and that is 1000×5.This is a volunteer-based operation whose mission statement is to ensure that every child in Victoria has read 1000 books by the time they are 5.  They collect new and gently used books for babies to 5-year-olds and I have found them to be so nice to work with.  Whenever I get a huge donation from a family, for example, I am able to take any board books, repeats, or books that aren’t needed in the library and donate them.  Also, whenever we have fundraisers at the school and collect food donations, I can stick the purple box out as well and encourage families to clear out the baby books as their kids grow.  This organization helps me feel like I am doing some good in the local community because I can actually see the children in the families that I am helping.  It is not uncommon for me to receive book donations where some of the books have donation plates from 1000×5.

Conclusion

This is an incredibly vast topic and I know that I have only just skimmed the surface, but I am dedicated to learning as much as I can about the possibilities that digital libraries can provide to people around the world who do not have the same access to education that many of us have been privileged to have in our lives.

Works Cited

Oetman, M. (2022, September 6). All children reading: A grand challenge for development. All Children Reading: A Grand Challenge for Development. Retrieved October 26, 2022, from https://allchildrenreading.org/

Signs and smiles app. Signs and Smiles. (2021, November 30). Retrieved October 26, 2022, from https://www.signsandsmiles.org/programs/signs-and-smiles-app/

Wagner, D.A., Castillo, N.M., Murphy, K.M. et al. Mobiles for literacy in developing countries: An effectiveness framework. Prospects 44, 119–132 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11125-014-9298-x

1000×5 – children’s literacy in Greater Victoria. 1000×5 Children’s Literacy – We Promote Childhood Literacy In the Capital Region. (n.d.). Retrieved October 27, 2022, from https://www.1000×5.ca/

1000X5 – thank you, donors! YouTube. (2016, October 25). Retrieved October 27, 2022, from https://youtu.be/zbdIWkjgGPI

Inquiry Blog Post #3: Supporting Teachers in their ICT Growth

Building relationships with teachers is crucial to student learning and success as a TL.  Schools are incredibly busy places with demanding schedules and it may be hard to create time and space to build those professional development opportunities for yourself and teachers.  TL’s are no doubt leaders in their communities, but I see my role as one of supporting the teachers in their creation and delivery of curriculum.  As supporting characters in a school, it is incumbent upon us to find ways to enrich the teacher’s and students’ learning experiences.  Becoming a digital resource and finding solutions for teachers online that make things easier for them and not more complicated, is the key.  As McClintock Miller and Bass (2019) discuss, one must insist upon five minutes of harassment where you can check in with a teacher about what their plans are for that week where in turn the TL can then position themselves as a mentor by identifying technology and tools that will enhance the teacher’s lessons (McClintock Miller & Bass, 2019, p. 22).

MINI LESSONS: Virtual Meetings, Social Videos and Virtual Museums

My school is a Montessori school and so the teachers there love a mini-lesson.  One of the ways that I could be supportive while also being respectful of their time would be to offer short presentations on new technologies or ideas that I have that could be useful in the classroom.  Over the last few years, we have all had to become more comfortable having meetings online on Zoom and so forth.  I am certain that there were many teachers who couldn’t wait to do away with this platform and get back to their precious in-person meetings.  However, to my surprise, my school has continued to offer virtual staff meetings because it is undeniably a useful tool for the whole school.  There is more autonomy in knowing that you don’t physically have to be in the building to attend a meeting.

Hilariously, last year, there was a teacher who chimed into the Zoom meeting from her dentist chair.  Granted, this is, of course, an example of exactly what admin had asked us not to do, but it was still necessary that this teacher was in both of those places at once, and so she did it.  For me, this opens up a world of opportunity that traditional school structures have never been able to accommodate.  If I needed to schedule a mini-lesson with teachers to introduce a technological tool that they could use, my first step would be a Zoom meeting so that we could get together quickly, without actually having to get together and then if they had any questions I would be there to answer them.

The other option would be to utilize our staff social media platform, Slack, that has been instituted since B.C. (before covid).  Instead of bombarding the teachers with emails, or taking up their time at lunch or before and after school, I would create some videos for them on a new tool that I have found.  I could post these videos on their grade-level channel and then they would be able to access them at their convenience and also go back to them if they need to hear the presentation again.  As I have become somewhat proficient in filming You Tube videos (I was actually a Fitness Instructing Star of my school during the lockdowns – I can only shake my head and laugh).

My next step is to learn how to record myself giving these presentations so that teachers can have the instructions to re-watch, pause and fast-forward or whatever the case may be.  This is a new skill for me, voiceovers would also work very well, but I have made a goal of actually having my little face-square in the corner of a presentation that I give to teachers this year.  Wish me luck!  This video has been a helpful starting point:

An example of a virtual tool that I might share with teachers in one of my soon-to-be-masterpiece-videos is Digital Museum Canada.  I was fortunate enough to attend the BCTLA 2022 Conference on Friday and one of the resources that was shared during the session, “Under the Sink” by Peggy Janicki and Jennifer Lane was a website with many wonderful teacher resources from Sq’éwlets-A Stó:lō- A Coast Salish Community in the Fraser River Valley.

This project is a virtual museum that is powered by Digital Museums Canada (formerly known as virtualmuseum.ca that has been decommissioned) is rich with language resources from the First Nation’s around the area with beautifully curated teacher resources that are ready to utilize in the classroom.  My ideal would be to be able to give teachers a tour of the website so that they can see exactly where and how to access the materials they can use.

As we continue to evolve and want to bring useful technology into our schools more seamlessly, it makes sense that we would begin to confer as colleagues using the tools and methods that we hope to encourage our students to learn how to use.  It feels less overwhelming and more manageable to more I dive into some of these practices.  My greatest hope is to not become a Digital Dinosaur, no matter the deficit that is my starting point.

Works Cited

Husid, W. (2013). Collaboration: Make It Happen in Your School. Library Media Connection,31(4), 42–44.

How to record yourself presenting a powerpoint presentation. YouTube. (2020, May 16). Retrieved October 23, 2022, from https://youtu.be/6abWf-5u3Gs

Funded projects. Digital Museums Canada. (2020, November 19). Retrieved October 21, 2022, from https://www.digitalmuseums.ca/funded-projects/

Miller, S., & Bass, W. (2019).  Leading from the Library: Help your School Community Thrive in the Digital Age. (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. International Society for Technology in Education.

Stó:lō Research and Resource Management Centre. (2016, November 1). Classroom resources. Sq’éwlets – A Stó:lō-Coast Salish Community in the Fraser River Valley. Retrieved October 21, 2022, from http://digitalsqewlets.ca/classroom-resources_ressources-pedagogiques/index-eng.php

 

Inquiry Blog Post #2: Setting up my Network and a Sea Shanty

As a human who is much more partial to in-person interactions than those online, I admit that my approach is much more limiting than someone who engages with their colleagues through social media.  So, I am looking at this week’s assignment, and truly, this entire course, to broaden my scope and get out of my comfort zone.  The focus points that began to emerge as I poked my head out of the sand to look around became, social media networking, online storyboarding and cyber security resources to share with my colleagues and students.

Social Media Networking

The first thing that I came across when researching more creative ways to connect with a like-minded community online was this social media site called TeachersConnect from our southern neighbours.  The idea warmed my heart as it is a place where teachers can streamline their networking with colleagues and find ways to support one another.  This video helps to explain the benefit of using a platform such as this to network with teachers over using more well-known social sites.

What sets this service apart is that since the focus is solely on educators, the user can cut out other noise or distraction that may occur on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook.  I think it would be beneficial for busy teachers to have a streamline, online source they could access that was focused on accessing answers to questions, shared resources and networking.

Online Tools

Storybird

As my pedagogy becomes more and more digital, and as I teach myself to become more of a bridge for my students and the online world, one of the programs I would love to utilize is Storybird.  I have seen colleagues utilize this app with their students, but my vision includes having a Storybird corner in the library.  I already have an Illustrator’s Corner, but across from there I would love to have a couple of iPads set up for the children to access and call it Writer’s Corner, or Story Corner…or something cute like that.

When the students learn Storybird in the class it is taught as a unit, so if I could provide space for them to come and interact with it on their own time and for their own reasons, I think this could be very powerful.  Storybird offers up an immense database of gorgeous visual art that students can use to build the pages of their storybook.  The images provide endless opportunities for the kids to imagine, dream and create different worlds and then work on developing the story around the images. Below is an example of the images that are available:

If the teacher in charge chose to do so, they could make the students’ work public, but I think I would set it up so that only students within our school could see each others work.  This would give the kids the experience of independently sharing their work to a wider audience without exposing them on the Wild, Wild, Web, thus minimizing the need for constant supervision and any security risk posed to the child.  Speaking of cyber safety…

Cyber Safety Resources

Thanks and credit go to Robert Weibe from our cohort who alerted me to the fact that October is Cyber Security month in Canada.  I found this adorable little ditty on the Government of Canada website that I will absolutely be sharing with my colleagues and also my grade 5-8 students so that we can talk about phishing scams and safety.  I’ll just leave it here for you…apologies if it sticks in your head, it is very catchy!

Who doesn’t love a sea shanty?  The Government of Canada website also has links to many free lessons that can be shared with school staff to help them stay up-to-date and arm their students with the knowledge to protect themselves.

Networking, online storyboarding and cyber security are a few ideas of how I intend to grow my online presence as I continue to navigate this intricate cyber-scape.

Works Cited:

An uncompromisingly teacher-centric online community of Teachers – Homepage. TeachersConnect. (2022, August 19). Retrieved October 15, 2022, from https://www.teachersconnect.com/

Establishment, C. S. (2022, October 11). Lessons on fighting phishing. Get Cyber Safe. Retrieved October 13, 2022, from https://www.getcybersafe.gc.ca/en/blogs/lessons-fighting-phishing

Get cyber safe: Phishing shanty (ruin a cyber criminal’s day). YouTube. (2022, October 4). Retrieved October 13, 2022, from https://youtu.be/8cOBw32jmgU

Read, write, discover, and share the books you’ll always remember. Storybird. (n.d.). Retrieved October 15, 2022, from https://storybird.com/membership-educator

Storybird app on Google Play. YouTube. (2019, June 13). Retrieved October 11, 2022, from https://youtu.be/zq2EqFx1ifY

What sets TeachersConnect apart from social networks like Facebook, Pinterest, LinkedIn & Twitter? YouTube. (2018, December 6). Retrieved October 15, 2022, from https://youtu.be/p1gRVK1g5gQ

Inquiry Blog Post #1: Fostering a Reading Culture: Hooked on a Book Fair Feeling

Fostering a Reading Culture

Book Fairs: The Past, Present and Future

As we descended into the Covid Pandemic, one of the many heart breaking cancellations was that of the beloved book fair.  In terms of fostering a reading culture in our school, book fairs are used as anchor points throughout the year to build excitement in the community and to showcase the joy that books bring children (and adults!).  Miller and Bass describe leadership in libraries as being, “about recognizing the opportunities that abound in school libraries and making the most of them to bring about changes that will empower and support your students as learners” (Miller & Bass, 2019, p. 11) and book fairs are a tool that creates these opportunities.

Our first fall term back in 2020 saw many, if not all I assume, schools scrambling to figure out how to host a book fair virtually.  There was radio silence on the side of the Grand Vizier that is Scholastic Inc. I had reached out to them to see what would be possible and I did not hear back from them for almost 2 months.  They too were scrambling.

I imagine it took many IT teams and epic stretches of the imagination to cobble together what became the first ever virtual book fair in my school’s history.  The disappointment was palpable in the classrooms.  The students had to resign themselves yet again to what everyone kept refereeing to as “the new normal” that felt anything but.  Even the most staunch of big-book-company-critics among the staff and parents were lamenting the change in implementation.  However, the minds at Scholastic figured it out and we proceeded with a very successful fair from the comfort of our own couches.  The experience really showed me, and certain aforementioned critics, that the jolt that students get out of these book fairs is really important, year after year, to incite devoted readers and inspire reluctant ones.

As a new teacher librarian 5 years back being introduced to our school’s collection, it was brought to my attention that the shelves and book spines were teaming with that trademark red square and the emblazoned ‘S’.  Our school had been hosting 2 Scholastic book fairs per year and accumulating credits for future purchases while our library account was in arrears due to a lack of library budget.  The complaints, from the teachers who voiced them, were that the books were not great quality and the content was sometimes vapid.  I took this to heart and when a savvy teacher approached me with the idea of dropping one of the fairs and replacing it with a local bookstore, none other than the storied Russell Books, I jumped at the opportunity.

Russell Books offers credit with their store in exchange for book fairs.  They can truly order anything and have an insane amount of back stock in their various warehouse locations around the city.  I began to think of them as my own private Amazon without the guilt and it felt good to be connecting within our community.

During the pandemic, Scholastic was able to rustle (pun intended and achieved!) up a virtual book fair, but Russell Books was not.  They have too much random stock, as a used book seller, to have enough of a handle on their inventory to offer lists virtually. To their credit, they did eventually figure that out and were able to offer a virtual experience. The pandemic gave both companies the urgency they needed to become more accessible online and have thus become virtual tools for schools.

The brightest light in our virtual book fair journey was Munro’s Books.  Munro’s virtual infrastructure was already strong pre-pandemic. When it became known that Munro’s was offering hybrid fairs, I was beyond excited.  Munro’s had been my favourite book store since I was a kid (who had only visited Victoria a handful of times from Alberta).  Their inventory was beautifully displayed, as it always is, on their website (if you have never shopped online there, I recommend it very highly – do it now, especially their Teachers and Schools page) and that made it seamless for shoppers.

The hybrid option, as we were moving into more vaccinated times, was that you could physically shop at Munro’s (any excuse!) and attribute your purchase to the school in order to build credit.  I had devoted parents emailing in photos of their children standing outside Munro’s with their new books and journals.  The credit we accumulated lasted over two years and I was able to do frequent ordering and visiting for pick-ups from Munro’s.  Delightful!  This is effective in fostering a reading culture at the school because when the students and teachers are asking for new books (be it large or small orders) I am able to surprise them with how quickly I can acquire them.

In conducting these experiments with in-person, local and virtual book fairs the shelves in our library are showing less red and I take a lot of pride in that.  It is important to have nourishing, immersive content on the shelves so that I can “offer a safe place where they (students) can explore and discover who they are through books” (Miller & Bass, 2019, p. 20).  I prefer not being beholden to Scholastic even though, I will admit, their fairs are by far the favourite for the students: it’s the merch!  I had one student say to me that he was sorry that the Russell Books book fair was such a flop.  I just smiled.  The Russell’s fair raised just as much money as the Scholastic one did, but because of the lack of toys and posters it felt different to him.

As we move forward with the year and our lives, we are back to our regularly scheduled fairs with Scholastic in the fall and Russell Books in the spring, but I have also decided to keep the Munro’s hybrid fair.  I would have thought there would be no room for virtual fairs because of the demand for in-person book-buying experiences.  However, the relationships I have developed with the people at that store, the ease of the shopping experience for otherwise vulnerable people online, the 20% discount for educators and their ordering power is too good to give up.  Book fairs are evolving and we need local and virtual experiences to continue to offer them to our school communities to bring the books to the kids.

Works Cited

Miller, S., & Bass, W. (2019).  Leading from the Library: Help your School Community Thrive in the Digital Age. (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. International Society for Technology in Education. 

All photos used are mine with permission.

Reading Review C: Reflecting and Bibliography-ing

Reflection

My research began, as all my research does, with a very broad and general scope.  I was searching for examples of using technology in the classroom, specifically the kindergarten classroom.  I thought that I was going to approach this inquiry with a mind towards practicality that would allow me to develop more of a technological approach to the young primary students that I interact with at my school.  There were literally hundreds of articles, so I began to chip away at them one by one and utilizing their generous reference lists to dive deeper into the worm hole.

As I plotted along, I realized, initially, that many of the research projects I found were being conducted in China, Japan and Taiwan.  I suppose I should have expected this as I, perhaps incorrectly, associate Asia as being ahead of us technologically speaking.  One of the studies mentioned augmented and virtual reality in teaching art lessons.  At first, I glossed over it thinking that I understood what VR was but the more I thought about it, I realized I could not picture what AR meant.  At this point in the process, I started to narrow my scope and zero in on what has been a fascinating exploration.

Augmented Reality technology is SO COOL!  How have I never heard of this before?  As a very dominant visual learner, I was totally absorbed in the videos I found on You Tube that demonstrated the use of AR in teaching anatomy.  I feel like if this technology had been available to me, I could actually have studied more science and kinesiology, which interested me but I believed that my brain could not retain what I thought was predominantly dry information.  How enriching to be able to peel off virtual layers of a human brain, or to crack open a rendering of a human skull?  The 3D abilities that I was learning about left me slack-jawed.

Next, I turned to Tedtalks.com as I wanted to see more examples of AR being used in classrooms of every level.  What I found there deepened my understanding about the implications of high level digital and technological advances and humanity.

Glenn Cantave talks here about how his non-profit in New York City is utilizing AR statues as art installations to further awareness and actual visibility of marginalized heroes instead of solely focusing his energies and efforts towards advocating for the removal of statues that glorify slave owners.

I continued on this thread and was treated to some refreshing truth and food for thought from Douglas Rushkoff. He is a media theorist and by the time I was listening to him speak, I knew that I had meandered quite far away from my initial staring point of looking at Jamboard and Smartboard usage in kindergarten classroom.  His ethical observations were very grounding in that they brought me back to consider my own broader feelings about technology in the classroom and the questions that he brings up in me will be fuel for the inquiry work yet to come.

Rushkoff had some very insightful views in what I would call a plea to humanity in an increasingly digital world.  He astutely points out that it is a great thing that we are at a place where we can teach kids to code at school because it will help them get jobs in the future, but that should not be the intention of education.  He points out that schools were initially created so that coal miners could learn to read and that it was about dignity and intelligence (Rushkoff, 2019).  If the purpose of schools is the train future workers, says Rushkoff, then “we’re just letting corporations really externalize the cost of training their workers” (Rushkoff, 2019, 5:09).

I am thankful for the design of these assignments to set me up and prepare me for the inquiry process.  I kind of feel like I have been Miagi’ed (Karate Kid) into diving into the thought channels that will bring the inquiry into more of a clear focus; I like it.  I am still interested in tools for use in the classroom, but I was approaching this in much too simplistic a way.  There are ethical implications that deserve consideration as well, and I look forward to grappling with these concepts as I move further along in the process.

Bibliography

Articles

Carol Aubrey & Sarah Dahl (2014) The confidence and competence in information and communication technologies of practitioners, parents and young children in the Early Years Foundation Stage, Early Years, 34:1, 94-108, doi: 10.1080/09575146.2013.792789

Hyunji Kwon, Kenneth Morrill. (2022) Virtual Reality: Immersive and Situated Art Education With 360-Degree Cameras, and Augmented and Virtual Reality TechnologyArt Education 75:4, pages 27-32.

Miller, T. (2018). Developing numeracy skills using interactive technology in a play-based learning environment. International Journal of STEM Education, 5(1), 1-11. doi:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-018-0135-2

Schriever, V. (2021). Early childhood teachers’ perceptions and management of parental concerns about their child’s digital technology use in kindergarten. Journal of Early Childhood Research, 19(4), 487–499. https://doi.org/10.1177/1476718X211030315

Selma Albayrak, Rabia Meryem Yilmaz. (2022) An Investigation of Pre-School Children’s Interactions with Augmented Reality ApplicationsInternational Journal of Human–Computer Interaction 38:2, pages 165-184.

Smeets, D., & Bus, A. (2015). The interactive animated e-book as a word learning device for kindergartners. Applied Psycholinguistics, 36(4), 899-920. doi:10.1017/S0142716413000556

Pao-Nan Chou, Chi-Cheng, C., & Mei-Yin, C. (2017). Let’s draw: Utilizing interactive white board to support kindergarten children’s visual art learning practice. Journal of Educational Technology & Society, 20(4), 89-101. Retrieved from https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/lets-draw-utilizing-interactive-white-board/docview/2147734816/se-2

Websites/Videos

A. (2021, January 4). Using google jamboard in the kindergarten classroom. YouTube. Retrieved September 15, 2022, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1Fg4gDb4iM

A. (2021, February 27). About. Creative Kindergarten. Retrieved October 1, 2022, from https://creativekindergartenblog.com/about-2/

Cantave, G. (n.d.). How augmented reality is Changing Activism. Glenn Cantave: How augmented reality is changing activism | TED Talk. Retrieved October 1, 2022, from https://www.ted.com/talks/glenn_cantave_how_augmented_reality_is_changing_activism?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare

Aamir, R. (2020, November 30). Augmented reality in education. YouTube. Retrieved October 1, 2022, from https://youtu.be/fI6VlHg25v8

Rushkoff, D. (n.d.). How to be “Team human” in the Digital future. Douglas Rushkoff: How to be “Team Human” in the digital future | TED Talk. Retrieved October 1, 2022, from https://www.ted.com/talks/douglas_rushkoff_how_to_be_team_human_in_the_digital_future?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare

Reading Review B – Diving into the Vastness

I know this should seem obvious, but when I started to dive into the vast amount of information out there on digital learning in kindergarten, I started by reading.  This illustrates where I am starting from because I am first and foremost a lover of books.  When I think about resources in the classroom, my first thought goes to finding the best book for the job.  This assignment is holding up a mirror for me to see all of the space I have to grow.  So, after finding many articles, combing through them, taking notes, I finally realized that there must be much more video content online…I feel antiquated admitting it; nonetheless, the learning has begun.

VIDEO:

Creative Kindergarten YouTube channel

This video was very gentle and easy to approach for a beginner like myself.  She is a kindergarten teacher and so I found her explanations of Sphero’s and Google Jamboard really straight forward.  She also gave realistic examples of usage of these technologies in the classroom.  For example, I have never thought of using Sphero’s to paint!  Brilliant!  I am still figuring this platform out and could not successfully embed the video, but I will keep trying!

WEBSITE:

Augmented Reality in the Classroom

This link is to a website for a company called eLearning Industry and I found it a result of reading an article from the UBC reserve materials about a study that was conducted in Hong Kong using AR to teach art in early years education.  Virtual reality and Augmented reality seem quite controversial but I would love to see it in action to be able to imagine all of the possibilities.  One of the barriers that comes to mind is that it must be cost prohibitive for many schools and districts and also that the pandemic has made us leery of sharing anything among students that goes over the nose.  I am very curious about the possibilities this technology offers and how it will evolve both as a tool in life and in the classroom.

ARTICLE:

Let’s Draw

This article had many practical ways to help kindergarten students, not only improve drawing skills, but also ways to inspire the kids to stretch their imaginations of what is possible.  Fine motor skills are elemental in kindergarten, and it is incredibly inspiring to imagine the self-expression we could see from kids with more tools at their disposal.  Not to mention, the sheer size of the Smart board becomes an immense canvas for the children to create and collaborate with one another.

Reading Review A – Where to Begin…?

To dive into this post, I began by collecting notes from my fellow cohort and making a list of terms that I didn’t recognize.  This is helping me to figure out where I am starting out from and that hopefully will lead me to the first steps of my path on this course, to paraphrase Miller and Bass (p. 94, 2019).

So far some terms I am looking forward to exploring over the next week are:

Padlet, Stop Motion, Book Creator, Libby, Reggio Emilia, Microsoft Lens, Ctrl-F “Find the Facts” and Web 2.0 and 3.0.

I have so much exploring to do and the more I think about it and try to narrow my focus the more I keep thinking about the Kindergarten students that I teach.  Mostly, I see them for library time and in the gym for P.E. but when I fist took on this role, I used to do French lessons with them as well.  We removed the French in order to free up more time for me to be reading with them and playing in the gym.  My admin came to prioritize this time over the French because they would start those lessons in grade one anyways.  However, now I am starting to wonder if it would be beneficial to start introducing technology into their library time.  I am curious about what is out there and to essentially find out what it is that I don’t know.

As I let my imagination wander and wonder about how to integrate basic and fun technology into my time with the Ks, I am beginning to see how I can take more initiative to be a learning leader within my school guided by the B.C. curriculum.  So far by looking at the Applied Skills and Applied Technologies sections provide a starting point, but more research is needed for me to find apps and source out the best tablets to introduce to the littles.

Works Cited:

Building student success – B.C. curriculum. (n.d.). Retrieved September 18, 2022, from https://curriculum.gov.bc.ca/curriculum/adst/k/core

Miller, S., & Bass, W. (2019).  Leading from the Library: Help your School Community Thrive in the Digital Age. (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.) International Society for Technology in Education.