Your
final assignment of the course is your course reflection. Here you will discuss
what you Learned (The L of the KWL) from the beginning of the course to now. In
this blog posting, please discuss the remaining course objectives you have
recently met that were not met at the midterm of the course (where you wrote
about them in the midterm reflection
).
(List them out and discuss how you met them). This also where you reflect upon
where you began before this class and what you have learned that will help you
in your future as an educator.
When I enrolled in this
course, I was not looking for laid-back instruction. My goal was to learn by
leaps and bounds, be constantly challenged, make discoveries on every step of
the way, and learn what is directly-applicable to my teaching practice. And this
course did not fall short of my expectations by any means. Truth be told, this
was one of the toughest courses I took at SNHU and the one I learnt the most
in. There were two major factors that made this course so effective for me. The
first was incredible enthusiasm and knowledge of our professor, Kim Tufts. The
second was the "hands-on" instruction delivered in the class. A
well-known Chinese saying reads, "Tell me something - and I'll forget.
Show me something - and I`ll remember. Let me experience it - and I`ll
understand.” Not surprisingly, having us immediately transfer everything learnt
in the class to our teaching led to such great outcomes. In the midterm
reflection, I already explained what resources discussed in the class I have
already started employing in my adult ESOL classroom. However, by that time we
had not done a lesson plan with an artifact and a WebQuest yet, and neither had
we followed state and national standards to develop lesson plans. Therefore, it
is high time I discussed how the lesson plan and the WebQuest together with
applicable state and national standards helped me to meet the rest of the class
objectives.
3.
Design meaningful and authentic digitally based learning experiences with
multiple and varied assessments.
In the lesson plan I
created, students used various online resources, including teacher recommended ones, to research Boston historic sites,
create digital photo stories on them to present in front of their classmates,
evaluate the effectiveness of their presentation, assess the learning of their
classmates, and create final photo stories of Boston to share their acquired
knowledge and travel experiences with their families and friends. In light of
their upcoming visit to Boston, the authenticity and relevance of this lesson
plan significantly increased. The students were assessed based on their group
work, individual work, digital photo stories, tests they created for the
classmates, and their overall comprehension and retention of the key concepts.
I want to believe that all my efforts resulted in truly meaningful and
authentic digitally based learning experiences with multiple and varied authentic
assessments.
My Webquest, designed for advanced ESOL students
working on research and academic writing skills, allows them to employ multiple
online resources to conduct a successful research, answer
higher-order questions (like whether or not they believe that Americans and the
British are divided by a common language), defend their points of view, and to
present their findings in front of their classmates. Students also employ their
creativity and imagination while creating an imaginary identity of a human
being a thousand years from now, writing his/her professional biography, and
acting on behalf of that person. (The latter technique is often used in
Desuggestopedia, which "desuggests" learning psychological barriers,
anxiety, and encourages students to take risks.) Students are assessed based on
their writing, research, presentation, the depth of their comprehension of the
key concepts, and the ability to communicate their findings and conclusions to
others. All these are examples of authentic assessment tasks and are very close
to the ones students will get in college mainstream classes.
4.
Reflect upon and demonstrate effective use of digital tools and resources.
I think that weekly blogging
allowed me to reflect upon effective use of digital tools and resources. As for
demonstrating, I met this objective by creating a lesson plan with an artifact
and a WebQuest. Tasks for the lesson plan and the WebQuest were aligned with
state and national standards (WIDA core standards, NETs, and English Language
Arts Core Standards) and were created taking into account their effectiveness
and efficiency. It is critical to ensure that fun and effectiveness are
balanced so that students advance academically while enjoying relevant and
engaging lessons. In fact, that is what I strove for throughout this course and
my lesson plan and WebQuest in particular.
6.
Illustrate through application how state and national standards are implemented
within the curriculum (e.g., NH Curriculum Frameworks, ISTE
(NETS-Teacher/NETS-Student) and NH-ICT Literacy Standards for K-12 Students
(306.42))
As I have mentioned above,
objectives and procedures for the lesson plan and the WebQuest were aligned
with state and national standards (WIDA core standards, NETs, and English
Language Arts Core Standards).
1 comments:
Thank you so much for the compliment. Hearing this means a lot to me and makes it worth doing each Monday night. I love what I do and love helping others learn about it. I enjoyed your thoughtful posts and the immense amount of work you put into everything you did. You are helping many people with the work you do and it is impressive the devotion you show. If you ever need anything, please let me know.
Post a Comment