Archive for category english
the Tree of Lost and Found
The Tree of Lost and Found : another great project by The Red Room Company!
The Tree of Lost and Found is a collection of created and found poetry, created by students from Newtown Public School. The poems have been tied to the ‘tree of lost and found’, and will be on display in Newtown until late Septemner, when it will be moved to the foyer of the Carriageworks.
Until then you can visit it and add your own poem!
Digital Storytelling
Posted by kmcg2375 in digital storytelling, english on September 1, 2008
I’ve come across some excellent resources tonight for teaching digital storytelling.
Memory’s Voices is the website for The Center for Digital Storytelling. When I visited the site the sample stories weren’t working, but the Digital Storytelling Cookbook is a great resource.
A great introduction to why we tell stories can be found on the Call of Story website. The site is geared more towrds a revivial of verbal, live storytelling, but the information about storytelling in general is great to get new digital storytellers thinking.
I also found great materials on this website made by Kevin Hodgson for the Western Massachusetts Writing Project. The site includes a detailed tutorial on how to use MovieMaker to make a digital story, sample storyboards, an assessment marking rubric, and more.
And amongst all this I had to go back to the Capture Wales site, just to watch a few more of their digital stories! The ‘BBC – Telling Lives‘ page is also a great source of digital stories.
David Griffin on how photography connects us | Video on TED.com
Posted by kmcg2375 in digital storytelling, english on August 23, 2008
Another TEDtalk that I’ll be using in my Year 9 unit on digital storytelling.
The photo director for National Geographic, David Griffin knows the power of photography to connect us to our world. In a talk filled with glorious images, he talks about how we all use photos to tell our stories.
Jonathan Harris: Collecting Stories
Posted by kmcg2375 in digital storytelling, english, school on August 19, 2008
Artist Jonathan Harris discusses his latest projects, which involve collecting stories – what a great talk!
I’d like to show this to Year 9 when we start making digi-stories, to get them thinking about how images can represent people and their lives.
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Identity resources
Followed a link from a note on Facebook which lead to some excellent materials by Michele Knobel and her colleagues. The papers that they wrote all addressed some aspect of the theme: Literacy, Identity, Place.
Our school this year has run an AOS on “Identity”, in preparation for the concepts dealt with in next years AOS: “Belonging”. I’ve tried to push the idea of studying online identity, but I’m not teaching the course so can’t get involved really with how it is conceptualised. But I think these papers, although they aren’t relevant at all points, would provide a good entry for interested teachers into thinking about online identity.
Gifted and Talented Action Research
Posted by kmcg2375 in english, research, school, video games on July 28, 2008
In my school I am part of a group of beginning teachers that are completing action research projects in their gifted and talented classes. Our school is half-selective, meaning half of the students had to sit an academic exam for entry. The rest of the school is made up of local students, but we also run a G&T class in years 9 & 10 of the local stream. The class I’m using for my action research is my Year 9 G&T class, and the unit I am studying is the videogame unit…fun research 🙂
In our school there is a focus on developing three traits of giftedness as identified by Renzulli:
- above average though not necessarily superior general ability;
- high level of task commitment or intrinsic motivation;
- and creativity
The students in my class certainly do display above average ability, and my aim is for my teaching units thie year to boost their levels of task commitment, intrinsic motivation and creativity. The videogame unit so far is proving successful in these areas – in today, the third lesson of the unit, students worked in their groups for the first time, taking turns at playing the games (Need For Speed: Carbon, and Street Fighter II) and at creating an account on our class wiki and making some new pages.
So far the level of task commitment and intrinsic motivation is sky high! The creativity is off to a slow start in some respects, but I think we did some important work today in laying the foundations for creativity. I spent a lot of times with the groups on the laptops today, making sure students were comfortable with their roles as writers/authors on the class wiki. This creating of information, along with activities in later weeks where students will create their own video game concept and characters, is all designed to lead students into higher order thinking.
Year 9 Wiki
Posted by kmcg2375 in english, school, video games on July 24, 2008
I’ve just finished creating a new wiki, this time for my Year 9 class, and this time it is one that I am actually going to use!
I’ve created two other wikis before – one for my HSC class, which I made using wikispaces. My Year 12s were struggling with the blog as it was, so the wiki never really got a start there. The other wiki I made was a general purpose one, which I imagined all of my classes would contribute to, on every subject that they studied. This way all of my classes, from years 7-12, over time would come to access this kind of mega-source of information. What a plan! What a community! But I decided not to run with the idea, because I don’t think the students really will go for the idea…I’m not convinced it’ll be so much fun adding to the site unless you really know the others that are making it too.
I’ve added a couple of YouTube videos on using PB wiki to my vodpod (click here or in the right-hand side bar). Anyone else out there using a wiki ATM? What is (not) working for you?
AATE conference
Posted by kmcg2375 in conferences, english on July 9, 2008
I’m down here in Adelaide for the AATE/ALEA National Conference – the conference just finished today, but I’m going to blog a few posts about the papers and keynotes I went to. I was tempted to take the lappy into the lecture halls and just write notes on the blog, but it never seemed to work out! I’ve still got a couple of days here for the AATE Council meeting, and then back home to do some PhD writing next week.
Happy School Holidays, eh? I reckon we should take up what a few independent schools do and just call it ‘non-term time’!
Seriously though, the conference has been good…I’m brimming with ideas now for teaching next term 🙂
and for Act II…
Posted by kmcg2375 in english, school, video games on June 29, 2008
I’ve been working on a short unit of work to do with my year 9 class next term once I’ve finished with the Video Games unit. I’ve decided that I’m going to run a ‘taster’ course in online tools that can be used to create or publish their work. We’re going to look at blogging, podcasting, uploading to YouTube and sourcing sound and images that can be used under a creative commons license.
I’ve decided to link both units together under the banner of ‘making meaning’ – weeks 1-5 will be based on how video games make meaning, and weeks 6-10 will look at making meaning online.
While students will work in small groups of 3-4 for the video games unit, they will work in pairs for the unit on making meaning online, to author their own blog. I’m going to be fairly prescriptive with what I want each blog to contain. Here are my current thoughts:
Students work in PAIRS to create a blog to publish their own compositions which must include:
• Central blog with a weekly post on class work or homework task, posts must include hyperlinks
• Widgets including at least admin, latest comments, categories and blogroll listing other students blogs, and other links
• A page for published poetry (including an image added for illustration or visual symbolism)
• A page for at least one published short story (embedded as a downloadable document)
• A page for published multimedia (embedded from YouTube)
Looking back over this list I see the requirements could seem a bit arbitrary, but I envisage that each of the required ‘pages’ will be linked to a series of weekly classroom activities/workshops.
Thoughts?



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