Thursday, August 11, 2016

2016 Texas Regional Collaboratives Conference

Texas has a system for teacher support and professional development that I have not seen before.  There are regional service centers that contract out for professional development to schools and districts for math and science.  These regional service centers are supported by universities around the state.  There is a chance that I am explaining this a bit incorrectly because even after asking numerous questions, I still had difficulty grasping the hierarchy and structure of the support system.  What I did come away with is Texas has numerous professional development opportunities for their teachers both through the region service centers and the local universities.  If possible, I would have stayed in Texas longer to take advantage of their coding sessions.  Nevertheless, in the short time I was there I was able to gather many takeaways, both from speakers and the teacher-led sessions I attended.
  

Takeaways:
  • Computer Science Resources: Barefoot Computing, Computational Thinking Teacher Resources, Code.org, scratch.mit.edu, CSTA, Daisy the Dinosaur (K-2), Dash and Dot, Tickle, Pixel Press Flowers, Code Warriors (Ages 9+), Hopscotch, Lightbot, Scratch Jr., Bloxels, Tynker, Botlogic, Blockly, Enchanted, Wonder Workshop,
  • Robotics - Ozobots, Sphero, BeeBot, LEGO WeDo, LEGO Mindstorm, Dash and Dot
  • Create a Symbaloo for coding sites for students.
  • Debugging is important in coding and robotics programming to develop computational thinking.
  • Code. org has unplugged activities that don't require technology.  Use these activities in centers with students along with programming and robotics.
  • Students designed arduino cars and printed their own wheel designs on 3D printers.
    • Teach a group of students to teach other students
    • Help them develop their knowledge of the materials and project to understand how to teach the other students.
  • TI Inspire Apps for iPads.  TI Inspire has programmable brain.

  • Science Notebooks can be designed to meet teacher and students needs.
    • Designate use of sides - left =assignments and right=creative or left =student output and right =teacher input
    • Use packing tape to protect cover
    • Can use multiple composition notebooks by joining covers with duct tape
    • Have notebook quizzes for accountability
      • "Tell me what's on Page 2."
    • Cafe menu for student outputs or assignments
    • Store notebooks in rooms or take pictures of pages for students to recreate lost notebooks
  • Dotstorming,com
  • Remind101 for private team communications (FLL or Idaho TECH Challenge) or other group cmmunications
  • "Why do some students wonder?"
  • "Why do some students crave more knowledge?"
  • Transitions between schools are critical moments to shape students' success.
  • Capabilities (growth mindset) - if you don't believe you can excel you won't put in as much effort.
    • So how do we shape students' sense of capabilities?
      • Belonging (comfort/ownership) - Are the other students in the class like me?
        • Gives you a sense of comfort and ownership.
      • Purpose (why) - How might what they are learning be useful to others?
        • Personal
    • Help students develop long lists of things they are good at.
    • Identify goals
      • Students may have different goals
        • learn content (learning goals) - increases likelihood of mastery response
        • show they know the content (performance goals) - increases vulnerability to a helpless response
        • May be different because students have different opinions about the intelligence (fixed or growth mindset)
    • We can insulate students from their own bad self theories to combat fixed mindsets.
  • ADI - Arugment Driven Inquiry
    • identify a task or need to solve a problem
    • generate and analyze own data
    • produce a tentative argument
    • argumentation sesssion with peers
    • write an investigation report (formal communication)
    • double blind peer review of investigation report
    • revise report
    • reflective discussion over the the inquiry
    • ADI website
      
      

Collaboratives sharing ideas at the evening showcase:
        

Wrapup:

No comments:

Post a Comment

Made It to the Fall Break

 Wow! What a year! I'm not just talking about 2020, but I am also referring to last school year 2019-2020 and the current school year 20...