· These videos and articles definitely made me
start thinking about the skills I need to teach my students, as opposed to the content. I certainly have always thought about my
teaching in terms of content and skills, but the skills have focused on
reading, writing, research, and speaking, all connected to improving thinking. Now, I am find myself contemplating incorporating more technology or
digital literacy or collaboration or Web 2.0 skills. The line in the first
video that pointed out that we are preparing kids for jobs that don’t even
exist yet really struck me! I need to
think not only about the content I am teaching, and what really matters from
that, but also the skills I am teaching because I just don’t know what they will
encounter. I need to prepare them in a broader way—thinking about how to
collaborate effectively (in person and online), how to co-author a piece
fairly, how to interact online in an ethical way. . .
I think that incorporating blogs or other online, interactive responses, perhaps using Google Docs, is a great way to engage digital learners. Students could do formative and summative work via Google Docs and share it with me and others in the class in order to have them comment/give feedback. I also like the idea of having students create review guides for tests in a collaborative, online way, and share it with me so I can comment and support their learning and review process too.
I have to remember that the Web can support my own learning; if I have a question I probably can find a place that will help me figure out that technology question online. It should become part of my "toolbox" rather than more of a place of frustration.
You are so right - we've had our social studies skills/targets for a while, but we probably do need to have a conversation with the department to see how we should update them to incorporate these technology/digital literacy skills in the Web 2.0 age.
ReplyDeleteI also loved the collaborative review guide idea - definitely something I am going to implement next year!