Sunday, October 20, 2013

To explain my long absence...

Holy smokes, I have been out of touch for over a month. In the time I've spent away from talking with...well, if anyone actually reads this blog...YOU...I've been finishing my MEd thesis paper. My topic? The use of hand writing for learning. I am NOT anti-tech...but I am anti-putting-all-the-eggs-in-one-basket.

Assuming all goes well, the 60 page tome will be submitted and reviewed within the next month. It's been sent out to a hand-selected group of kind but intellectually critical readers as of yesterday, with the idea that if I can convince a wider variety of people to believe that there is a real benefit to writing by hand, then I might be able to make a real difference in some kid's life.

Or so it may seem. In short, computers are making very lazy students; they don't want to understand that the computer and the Internet and all the techno-toys out there won't make them better thinkers or communicators. I guess it's my role in life to try and show them, time and time again, that they will benefit from using the proper tool for the task at hand.

In the interim, between my last blog post and today, I have had my usual fun with tech. SMART board issues, computer issues, phone issues (my daughter's)...you know, the realities of living in the 21st century. I had a pen issue today; it ran out of ink. I got another one. Problem solved. I only wish all tech issues were so easily solved.

Ciao for now.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Things I like in the tech world....

Yeah, I like some tech. Not that it's a huge surprise, not to those who know me. I am dangerously close to being addicted to Words with Friends and I am linked at the brain with my facebook. That being said, I have recently entered into a comfortable courtship with a Kindle Fire HD. I don't have the foggiest idea how many of the features work, yet. But I did download and read an entertaining mystery novel. I can borrow one book for free per month; no risk there. And the book was not one I would have bought, so that's cool. The first book I actually bought was...Anne of Green Gables. Don't judge; I was having a nostalgic moment, and it seemed uniquely appropriate to juxtapose a classic and the technology upon which I would be reading it.

There are a ton of free apps I have added to the device as well, most of which attest to my addiction to sports, history, and of course, Words with Friends. I see that I can watch movies, and I have listened to music on it. I am intrigued and a little sketched out about using Skype on it. (Kind of feels like a Mirror, Mirror, on the wall thing.)

Mostly, I got the darn thing because it was on sale, and I could see that it would give me options for when I was sitting around with nothing to do...appointments that are not on time, for example. Sadly, what I cannot do is go on it at work. That requires a password which, I understand, is guarded by the Swiss Guard, Cerberus, and a cranky gnome with an itchy trigger finger. (Just kidding...I haven't gotten around to asking for it.)

So, I have entered the Tablet Universe.

Stay tuned.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Tech Troubles...Part idk...a million?

So, it's been almost a month since I last posted. Getting ready for a new school year consumes energy and brain, not the least of which is dedicated to making sure what I am hoping to do actually will work, and includes a "plan B" for when things don't quite go as planned.

My SMART board is in need of a technician to pay it a visit. Inexplicably, but not altogether unexpectedly (I think it is possessed by a gremlin), it will not turn on. It was working in June, and no one has used it all summer. So...I am working with my 3 square feet of white board. And of course I saved a few things on that computer that I can't access...nothing huge, but it will require redoing work. Bleah. No wonder I have trust issues with tech.

My personal laptop is going to the puter doctor on Tuesday, as the space bar requires brute force. I think that this should be a relatively easy/inexpensive fix. I hope so. I have to get busy on finishing my Masters' thesis...and pounding the space bar is exhausting. And there is that little thing called I have to do lesson planning, grades, and other assorted things via computer.

Bright spot: I caved and bought a Kindle Fire HD. I downloaded a book and read it. Things I like include the cool function that tells you how long it will take you to finish the book, based on your reading speed. Things that I don't like include batteries that run out of juice just as you get to the "good part" in a murder mystery. I love the fact that all the music I've ever bought from amazon.com is available to be played...in all, good purchase.

So today is a rainy day, which will preclude me going outside to do much. I might just have to read. A book. The paper kind.



Tuesday, August 6, 2013

For further thought, regarding Hunger Games:

I just read this blog post on Jezebel...
http://jezebel.com/at-real-life-hunger-games-camp-children-intend-to-fig-1048895777

It seems that there's a school-based summer camp patterned on Hunger Games, and the children attending LITERALLY believed they were to kill each other. And they were willing.

I'm scared.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

 Hunger Games, Blood Sport, and Technology

My, my, I have been a poor correspondent.
Well, to *be* a correspondent, one must have someone with whom to correspond, eh?

Anyhow, I have been giving a lot of thought of late to the trilogy of books that begins with The Hunger Games, and how that post-apocalyptic world is really quite frightening. The Games are computer-designed and managed by people who crave blood sport, but who are too removed both emotionally and physically to be really affected by the outcome. This, to me, is the ultimate end of technology, if it remains unchecked and untempered by humane behavior. We see too often young people who are psychologically and physiologically affected by too much computer gaming, who are callous in their disregard for each other by texting, online "chat," and other forms of social media, and the result is a desensitized generation(s) of disconnected individuals who have little real interaction with other people, and who have learned disembodied violence from a very young age, and consider it "relaxing" and fun.

The Romans had the Colosseum, and today's world has...cyberspace. I don't think that the "odds will ever be in [our] favor."

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The printed page and personal contact

Sorry I haven't been in touch, but I've been inhabiting the world of the printed page, poetry, poets, and people. I mean, people in the flesh. Human contact. Something, we who were at the conference all determined, don't tend to have enough of, at least not chosen, intentional contact, in this cyber-isolationism we've imposed upon ourselves. Yeah, the kids would hashtag that as "first world problems." And I tend to agree, although there are developing nations that have little clean water, but yet have Internet. Go figure.

One thing that struck me this week while I was attending and reading at a poetry gathering, was the oddity of  the few people who took the podium in Robert Frost's rustic barn in Franconia, NH, surrounded by trees, mosquitoes, and rapt faces...who opened up their laptops to read. It felt and looked really incongruous, and I was not the only one struck by the weirdness of it. It felt as if the page--as in, paper--should be celebrated, there in the historic setting. And there was the fact that the faces of the readers were oddly lit, the light source coming from under the chin, from the computer screen. The strangest thing, one that seemed not only out of place, but hard to work around as an audience member, was the barrier between reader/speaker and the listeners caused by the upraised screen. It just felt wrong. And this reminded me of the many, many times I have looked out at my own classroom, and found that eye contact was almost impossible to maintain, as all the eyes were down-turned, focused on the screen and whatever task or distraction was being displayed.

Something to ponder, I think. Human beings need human contact, and we must be very aware of the boundaries we erect while trying to make connections.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Two days at poetry camp, and my head is already swimming. Not only is it the company of so many colleagues who are doing the same (right) thing in so many schools, but it's also the buzz of ideas. New this year is the ongoing under thread of the Common Core, and how what we are doing supports the standards. Also, the implementation of technology in the practice and teaching of poetry has come up many times. We are all mostly in agreement; one woman, a tech integration specialist and English teacher from North Carolina said it best: "if the technology is not transformative, don't use it." In other words, if it's fun, and catchy, and an interesting gimmick, it's not enough to sell her on using it in the classroom. And her school is a private one that is tech based, with most of their students going to what she calls the "...IT schools," as in MIT. Also, there are apparently many working poets who love to skype; this could be awesome for so many schools that don't have the budget to bring a person to their schools physically. I will be getting a list sometime soon, and when I do, I will share info. Podcasts are something a lot of teachers have tried, and with varied interest on the part of their students. My final project for class focuses on the use of podcasts and skype; I was really glad to hear others talk about their uses and experiences with these two forms of tech, as I was just "pie in the sky-ing" when I chose to embed those two things in my project. In short, it appears it might just work. (phew)

I'm still at "camp" until Friday, and I would posit I will be even more awash in new ideas by then. I'll check in.

Poetechnologically yours...

Friday, June 21, 2013


“Before you become too entranced with gorgeous gadgets and mesmerizing video displays, let me remind you that information is not knowledge, knowledge is not wisdom, and wisdom is not foresight. Each grows out of the other, and we need them all.” 
― Arthur C. Clarke

I'm mentally trying to transition gracefully from my technologically dominated world (and I do mean dominated, and some, if not all of it, is by choice) to a more introspective, slower-paced measuring of time. That is to say, summer. I need to stop checking my Facebook, my phone, my emails, my Words With Friends, my clocks...in short, all of the things that dictate the who, what, where, when, and why of my daily existence. To this end, and to preserve my sanity, I will be going to the Frost Place in Franconia, NH for a total immersion week that is functionally titled the Conference on Poetry and Teaching, with an extra day and a half workshop called Teachers as Writers. Titles aside, I will be going to Poetry Summer Camp. And I am glad, glad, glad. Six glorious days of sitting in Frost's barn, listening to words, to people, forging bonds across time and space with people I don't see but maybe once a year, or once in a lifetime. I will be relatively unplugged, yet totally plugged in. There is something both energizing and comforting about trekking uphill on a dirt road to the Frost Place, greeting the day with coffee, conversation, and collegiality, and knowing that, at least for a short time, I will be with my "tribe," focusing on the ways that words connect people. As connected we are by our electronic devices, we are never more divided at the same time. We need to hear each other pause and think, to speak with intention and affection, to question and puzzle out ideas and nuances. In short, we need to slow down. And dwell with words. And be present to each other. This is wisdom-making, and we need it more than ever.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

When the lights go down in the city...a thought or two

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvE0G4a994E (Journey...yah, just listen and enjoy...)

I submitted my final project for class today. One might think that it would be cause for celebration, or relief, or what have you, but instead, I find myself really thinking about where and when tech fits into my general schema. I have grown so accustomed to more than half expecting all things tech to fail at any given moment, I'm still not sure I want to trust or rely on embedded tech elements. Yet, when these things work, they add a lot to what we are already doing. The world we live in requires a more than passing acquaintance with all things digital, and I am no neophyte myself. However, I still maintain that elementary skills are paramount; no amount of technology will help one bit if the student/user brings an empty rucksack to the camp out. I see tech as being of a supporting role; if my lesson requires tech to work properly, though, I might be in trouble. The core of any lesson must be simple and solid, and if it's not, no amount of fancy stuff will help it out one bit. I worry a little about the younger teachers, or pre-service teachers, who depend so much on technology. I am not convinced they are creative enough in their teaching, or solid enough in their own basic skills, that they can continue on when the lights go out...whether that is literal or figurative, it makes no difference. Both happen, and we need to be prepared. If Socrates could teach without props, leading the young men of Athens in logic and rhetoric under a tree in the middle of town, we should be able to do at least the same.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Podcast...done, if not awesomely, but I did it. woot!

Ok, don't laugh. Ok, laugh if you wish...I won't hear you from here.

cmgadapee.podbean.com

Feel free to comment.




Poetry Meets the Techno World and the Whole Damned Thing Gets Weirder

OK, it's probably me. Well, at least the Puritan, New England guilt that leeches from the granite and into my whole being is willing to accept the responsibility and required penance for trying to create a podcast of me reading and giving hints and suggestions for finding commonalities among the poems of John Keats, Wendell Berry, and myself. I am still trying to figure out if it was Keats' shade that objected most to his poem being read on a podcast, or if it's the punishment for the sin of hubris (OK, mixing Greek mythological retribution and Puritanism here, but it works in my head) of reading my own work into a microphone and hoping to post it out there in the aether. Actually, the Greek metaphor is working well here, as the downloaded converter (aptly called Lame) that I was supposed to use to transform my podcast file into an mp3 for uploading (and downloading) purposes carried a Trojan. Thank goodness my computer security caught it and blocked it (I have mental images of a burly kilted warrior with long mustaches blocking the computer...yes, I have McAfee).

For what it's worth, I was reading and asking the listeners to consider and find common elements among the three poems: Keats' "When I Have Fears," Berry's "The Peace of Wild Things," and a poem in progress of my own. This paired and compared poem exercise is not a new idea in my classes, but I thought it would be a useful project to transform the idea to a podcast (final project for class), and demonstrate to my students that a/ I am not a Luddite, and b/ poetry is an aural and oral art, and hearing it read makes a world of difference.

That all being said, my Prof is helping me figure this meshuggah mess out.

How's that for being multicultural? Puritans, Greeks, Yiddish, and TechnoSpeak. woot, me.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
(turn and face the strain)
Ch-ch-changes
Oh, look out you rock n rollers
Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
(turn and face the strain)
Ch-ch-changes
Pretty soon now you're gonna get a little older
Time may change me
But I can't trace time
I said that time may change me
But I can't trace time
(David Bowie)




Change. It's the one constant in life, and, by extension, in the world of education. Some changes are extrinsic, others, the ones that are more permanent and quite probably more important, are intrinsic. Institutional change is ongoing, often creating some chaos and resulting in abandoned initiatives and disaffected teachers, students, and parents. Changes in educational policy have much the same results. The most powerful change is the change that comes from a deeper understanding of what one's role is as a teacher and co-learner in both the educational setting and the personal one as well. How does this relate to technology, students, and the expectations that are set by others outside the world of the classroom? As a co-learner and mentor in the classroom, one's role is to investigate all opportunities and vehicles for learning, embracing the ones that make sense and that can make a positive contribution to the learning process for everyone involved. Some aspects of technology are "gadgets" and the things that dress up a lesson or a finished product. Others are far more useful; some management tools do, in fact, make record keeping and reporting easier (when they work!), and some educational tools are quite helpful, and support the learning process in meaningful ways. It is our job to first inspect what it is we hope to achieve with the lessons we offer to our students, and then seek out a variety of ways to support the lessons and the learning expectations. Online resources such as Purdue OWL, Wikipedia, and other forms of locating and sifting for informational texts are beneficial, while other forms of technology can be a distraction (at worst), or a novelty to engage students' interests (at best). The teacher's role is to determine what the proper tools are to bring students to the place where their best learning can take place. 


Have I changed due to this short exploration of various forms of technology? I don't really think so, except that it has given me an opportunity to look at what I teach, what I want the students to learn, and consider a variety of tools and how they can best support what we are working on. Could I continue to teach with very little technology embedded? Sure I could. However, I can, and do, use technology as part of my teacher's "magic bag of tricks" to call upon to assist my students and myself. There are times and opportunities when the newest and brightest innovations bring what we are doing to a whole new level, and that is exciting and will bear good fruit. I hope, though, to never lose sight of what the true goals of education are: to read, to consider and think critically, to learn to communicate effectively, and to reflect on what one thinks. When, and if, technology can support those goals, then it's certainly a good choice to use whatever is available to us. 

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

If we allow our self-congratulatory adoration of technology to distract us from our own contact with each other, then somehow the original agenda has been lost.
Jaron Lanier 


As I sit here, randomly checking and rechecking my emails and social media posts, I wonder just how connected we are with each other. I mean, yes, we have the means, but do we truly have the desire to do the real work of maintaining interpersonal relationships? Today, when friendships are formed digitally, bullying occurs in a faceless medium, and people hook up and break up without having to look each other in the eye, the human contact element seems to be suffering. One of the unintended and tragic casualties of our hyperconnectedness is a lack of true connection; the anonymity of the Internet, texting, and instant messaging makes human commitment fleeting, or deceptively intense, with little in between. Teenaged dramas are enacted hourly online. Family issues are aired openly in the social media. All of a sudden, private issues are now overtly public, and the audience is not the three best friends crowded into the girls' bathroom or around the coffee table. It is all of us. And I, for one, feel that this is both inappropriate and immensely sad.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

We need to make sure that there's art in the school. Why? Why should art be in the school? Because if art isn't in a school, then a guy like Steve Jobs doesn't get a chance to really express himself because in order for art to meet technology, you need art.
LL Cool J 

I sense that the tenor of my posts is often negative, but that's not really how I feel about the world of technology. I love the way I can find sources, information, entertainment, or friends in the blink of an eye. I'm an information junkie; the web provides me with the means by which I can satisfy my need to know as fast as I can think up things to think. As it were.

However! I do want to address the issue of balance. Like any other new-ish thrust in the world of education, and in fact, in the consumer-culture we live in, technology is holding center stage pretty securely. We are allowing Big Tech to monologue, and this is a source of frustration and failure on our parts. We should consider what we hope to achieve, before we jump immediately to the tech component. This is not to say it's not useful, and in the right hands, and with the right amount of pre-planning and intention, great things can, and have, been achieved already. What concerns me the most, though, is the imbalances that are now apparent in many schools, and in our culture, today. The misuse of technology, and the over-reliance on computers and other digital media, has caused a shift away from the other elements of an education that make us whole humans. We desperately need art, music, literature, play time, thinking time, and drama. And not the sort of "drama" that comes from social media kvetch-fests. If technology can be used to enhance what we have traditionally treasured, and not replace it, then we'll be doing okay. I mean, I love the fact that I can take a virtual tour of the Louvre; I would like to still see it exist and thrive in the real world as well. I fear, though, that because we can visit it virtually, people will not go and do and see, and thereby cause the demise of that fine institution. And so it goes for concerts, plays, and other forms of human-created, human-enacted, forms of art and culture. We should be educated, wary, and informed consumers and users of the tech available to us, and we should take it upon ourselves to guide our students wisely as well.
In the kingdom of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. - Desiderius Erasmus

Today is the last day of the school year, with students, anyhow. Grades are due by tomorrow, to be posted to the computerized grade book and this ingenious program will tally and make the grades all neat and pretty, ready for the world to see.

Welcome to the mythology that we are operating under in my little world.

Today is definitely the last day. Grades have been posted. That much is verifiable fact, not to be confused as truth, which is another thing altogether, being, as it is, rooted in agreed upon mythologies and the like. From this point on, the situation is a bit muddled. See, we have this brand-new, time saving, super-muscular entity that runs all of the record keeping for us...and none of us really know how it works. Grades entered do not tally in any mathematical universe, but this is not true for all teachers, just some. We don't know why. Grades posted appear on the web, so parents and students can receive info instantly; thus, we are subject to immediate scrutiny, and we have no solid answers. And reports? Pish. Who needs those to reflect what we know to be fact, as entered by our own (fallible !?) human hands. 

Case in point, a student of mine earned a 70 for the semester. It shows a 70. Yet, when I wanted a print out summary of the semester grades for my class...it shows a 69. Now, I know it's not a rounding down thing; I hand entered the 70. What??? Weird, eh? Teachers are stressing, the Administration/Guidance people are hatching an egg, parents and students are confused, and grades are due. As in, due. Over. Semester/year all done. And NO ONE knows or is completely sure what needs to be done/can be done. See, in a perfect world, someone would have arranged for training about this program for us. We.Had.None. OK, a photocopied handout of links. We were informed that it was easy to use, to just click around and get to know what it can do. (In my spare time? OK, I did. I'm compliant.) If we couldn't figure it out, we should ask each other for help, or look on youtube. For the entire school year, we've been clicking around, and guiding each other, stumbling along...and now, it's the end of the year. I think my data is correct. I entered it, and checked it. What the program does from here on in is beyond my ken. And I honestly feel just passive-aggressive enough to be glad it's not my problem. At least not yet.

And the Computer Gods are laughing at our hubris. 

Saturday, June 8, 2013


Freestylin' with Coffee, Thinking about Technology...are we creating the Borg?

I have been considering the effects of our reliance on technology (notice, I did not say 'of technology') on the human community. The dichotomy between interconnectedness and a lack of empathy for one another is profound, and very disturbing. 

Science and technology revolutionize our lives, but memory, tradition and myth frame our response.
Arthur M. Schlesinger 


We have, as a developed society, given over the reins of control to our tools. So much societal and educational emphasis is placed on being competent and conversant in technology, we have, as a culture, forgotten what makes us human and humane. We need to snatch back our inner spark, before it becomes extinguished, before we become Borg-like (yah, nice little Star Trek reference, eh?), and we operate only in a hive-mind type of society. All throughout human history, mankind has sought ways of differentiating himself from the collective, to gain free will and control over his own destiny. This Promethean impulse is quickly being shoved aside, to only have our children wired up and wired together, all in the name of...what? I'm not really sure what goals we hope to achieve. 

This is not to say that computers and other forms of technology are bad; they are unbelievably powerful means by which we can, with intention, create, inform, connect, and synthesize with other people anywhere around the world. What I am concerned by is the fact that most of my students have a mental sedentariness that frightens and perplexes me. Many are so hooked in and hooked up they have no facility for independent thought. Their situation is paradoxical, at best. They want independence, yet that is expressed only in ways of being connected to others, seeking digital approval (hmu, lms, truth is), and almost frantically needing to be physically connected to their current digital devices. There will be few, if any, mavericks in this bunch, I can assure you. Innovation requires independent thought, and I fear they are not ever going to be comfortable with taking risks academically or personally, in order to achieve anything meaningful or unusual. The Collective, which is sometime a great dynamic, can brainstorm ideas. However, it takes someone with a different perspective with the innate sense of adventure that propels him or her to go his/her own way, to offer new solutions, to even inspire the Collective to go another path. This is true for every arena of human existence, not just in the field of technology. New literature, arts, music, medicine all take a single person to say 'no, this is not working, existing strategies don't apply, what next?' 

To make a rock'n'roll record, technology is the least important thing.
Keith Richards 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013


Where do you hit a wall with  technology, and how can you work to be better at using it?
I would hit the wall squarely in the middle, with a hammer, in order to leave a lasting mark.
Just kidding.
The “wall” I tend to hit is the lack of cooperation on the part of other humans; I am a bright and capable, computer/tech competent person. When I have a question about tech, it’s because I have not been able to research an answer, and blindly clicking about for hours on end hasn’t yielded results. I find that those who are more capable than I oftentimes fall into two categories: those who really want you to be able to play with the toys, and those who think the toys are their special province, and they only reluctantly share information. We have three really savvy people in my school; two are super and are willing to help anyone learn, and who are patient and kind with those who need guidance in the techno world. The third, well, yeah. Depending on the day and who you are, and if you are considered in the “inner circle,” the Great and Powerful Oz might deign to be of use. But I’m sure we all have people who are like that, and not just in the technology arena. We learn how to work with these types of people, too; it just takes a little more sugar and creative request-framing.
I find that the best way to get better at using tech is to just use it; attend trainings, ask people who are using the things you want to use, and just play with them. We have a class set of flip cameras available in the building; signing them out and playing with them, and then allowing students the freedom to tweak their videos and be a little goofy is fine. Experiential learning is, I have found, the best way to become adept at the various forms of digital media available. The one fear that I got over rather quickly years ago was that I’d click on the wrong thing and break the very expensive whatever it was. I found that, unless I got into files I rather ought not to be messing with, I couldn’t break anything, and that shutting the computer off (or camera, or other device) would generally earn me techno-forgiveness. So now, I click and poke and reset at will.

Parkour: Tech Style


Money is always an obstacle to tech availabilty, as I’ve noted before. Budgets are ridiculously tight, and the educational spending triage that has to happen is inequitable. In my school, we have a lot more technology than many schools do, which I suppose is a blessing. I mean, it’s there, and I can use it, and I don’t have to sign out a computer cart, or have my name on a waiting list and all that. Our kids have the chance to be fully wired up all day, if we wanted them to be. However, it seems the more we have, the more we seem to need…sometimes it feels like the influx of tech is creating a money pit of the sort that we’ll never be able to catch up, or be able to reasonably allocate funding to anything else. Books still matter, as does paper, and pencils, and many of the other “low tech” but hands on options, like crayons and paint. What does one do with the outmoded forms of tech that get heaped up? It’s not like there’s a trade-in program, like there is with automobiles. The planned obsolescence of technology is frankly frightening, and I am beginning to see the real disparity of funding that is a huge part of “keeping up” with educational technology.
I don’t feel like there’s a huge resistance factor on the part of the teachers, though; in many places, that is a huge obstacle to change. Not all of my colleagues are equally versed in all things tech, but we all try, and we go to trainings, and seek out assistance. Sometimes we wander around in the tech wilderness together, but we manage to get through it, and we generally embrace technology as it applies to our needs and the students’ interests. Can we do more? Probably; but then, sometimes it’s not really needed, and I find, myself, that it is often quicker, for example, to just grab a dictionary off the shelf rather than go through the shenanigans required of accessing the online dictionary.
On a practical level, sometimes tech fails us; the connectivity challenges, the less than full wi-fi coverage, and the inequitable allotting of resources can be a hurdle that takes up a lot of time to work around. I have a SMART board, but the computer tethered to it is an old desktop model, balanced on a media cart, and it sounds like its grinding coffee half the time. But, we make do. It’s not perfect, but it works. Like with all other aspects of teaching in a rural area, we must be resourceful ad have many back-up plans. When the Internet is down, we should be able to accomplish the lesson in other ways. When students lose the use of their laptops due to misuse/breaking their contract, the planned activity should be able to be accomplished in other ways.
In sum, technology is a great tool, one of many that we need to be able to employ, and sometimes, if a tool fails, we should be creative enough to be able to revise and move forward seamlessly. 

Friday, May 31, 2013

What's up, doc?

Google docs.
Some of my colleagues are using this shareware with their students, and with relatively good results. I have been told recently that our school will be switching over to Google docs next year; I'm sure it'll be a learning curve for many of us. In it's most basic form, it will give us a good place to store things, instead of eating up storage space with the X and Y drives we've been using. I have no practical experience with Google docs, so I'm looking forward to getting some direction regarding its use and functions during this course!

Some students don't find it helpful, but their reasons tend to be on an individual level, not a wide-spread area of difficulty or concern. I am uneasy about storing EVERYTHING on it, so I'm going to ask students to back up important things on flash drives and with hard copy, as appropriate. Too often, if tech fails, it tends to fail spectacularly. I believe in covering one's bases, as Murphy's Law has a whole new addendum that covers technology...and one must be prepared for every eventuality!

Thursday, May 30, 2013

What to Choose/What to Use

In my tech for educators class, we've been asked to investigate some forms of tech that we don't currently use and/or know much about, and determine their usefulness in our classrooms. I have to be honest; we have a ton of "toys" available to us at my school, and we've been enhancing our programs with their use for a long time. I haven't, however, utilized podcasts or skype in my classroom or in my lessons.

I spent a bit of time yesterday talking with one of our tech ed teachers at school, as she is both knowledgeable and approachable, and she will also help teachers and students in any way possible. I asked her about podcasts and skype, and how I might use them effectively in my high school English classes. We brainstormed a bit, and I have decided to try both in the coming school year.

Students enjoy creative writing, but they are often shy about sharing. They also don't always have a keen sense of audience when writing or sharing. I think podcasts might be a fun and useful way to get them to not only consider audience, but also be more willing to share their own work, as the audience is, effectively, anonymous. Skype could be valuable as a way to connect some of my author friends with my students, in a cost effective and immediate way. Working with published authors, and hearing them read/speak about their work and the writing life, is always such a good way to engage students. Too often we are limited in our contact due to budget constraints, time, and distance. Skype would be a great way to connect everyone in a fairly relaxed way, and would bring literature and writing to another level for the students.

This could be very exciting, and has few obstacles that I can see, other than getting our IT guy to let me download skype to the classroom computer. That may take some doing, but who knows...I can be pretty convincing, especially since it will save money...ah, budgets. What a weapon to use in all negotiations...

Tuesday, May 28, 2013



Men have become the tools of their tools.
Henry David Thoreau 

Point to Ponder.

I often wonder about "computer literacy" and other similar classes taught--and required--at most public schools today. I am not at all against the use of technology, but I find it puzzling at times that we spend years and years teaching students how to use the computers at their disposal, quite often predominantly focusing on function. At times, the classroom teacher feels compelled to essentially short-change students when it comes to exposing them to other curricula, or they try to teach the curricula via technology, "killing two birds," as it were, "with one stone." Students first need to be taught how to think, to question, to plan and follow a line of inquiry; the computer, and all other forms of related technologies, are tools. We don't spend enough time helping students formulate good questions, or to think in ways that make newer and deeper connections. This task takes time, and thought, and not rushing forward to search out someone else's answers. The computer is an awesome tool, but one must also teach students to respect its limitations as well. If we don't know what we are hoping to find out, what we want to achieve, then we are driving the information highway without a destination; we won't know when we have "gotten there."

Monday, May 27, 2013

My first class is scheduled to start tomorrow, and I am curious about what we will be doing. I use a lot of technology in my classes already, but I am also aware there is much more I could incorporate. My goal is to balance tech with tradition, to expose my students to a wide variety of options that are available to them. My philosophy has always been to use the proper tools for the task at hand; sometimes digital tech is the best option. At other times, crayons, pens, pencils, glue and a more hands-on approach is the right choice. Too often, I see students jumping straight to the computer and it's applications, instead of thinking about what medium would best suit their end-goals.

We shall see what comes about! Stay tuned...

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

The Grand Adventure Begins

I am embarking on a quest to incorporate more technology into my cozy little word-smithing world. This should be a grand adventure; while I am still more comfortable drafting with pen or pencil, the immediacy and ease of instant communication venues has a certain allure.

We shall dwell in the ether together, you and I. I assume the "you" will be in the multiple sense; you (all) and I (singular) will seek to marry the urgent world of the digital universe with the timelessness of thought.

Off we go....