Hey Students,
Need a new way to do another PowerPoint? Add your own voice to your visuals and turn it into a podcast with VoiceThread.com.  Your friends (and your teachers) can comment on your work with their computer's built-in mic or one you check out from me or Miss Helen here in the library. (Yes, you can checkout our headphone mics, really!) :) The VoiceThread above is an example I made for Ms. Robbins' English 9 Honors class.

 
 

yup, that's right, casa's freshmen were podcasting during their first week back in school after summer break! :) pretty high tech, huh? :)

well, their computer literacy teacher, mrs. donna reed, wanted them to have a tour of the big house library. :) i thought they should do something techy while they were there. so we pulled out the digital audio recorders and watched them have fun recording their reactions for posterity.

in almost no time at all, mrs. reed and i brainstormed the questions and developed the rubric. it's hard to believe how fast and easy it was to pull off a lesson like this. i hope more casa teachers will try it. :)

curious to know what the students had to say?

you can listen to all of their podcasts at:
http://casacomplit1011.pbworks.com/project-1-library-tour-podcast

 
 
"What is with the whole school turning, like, technologically advanced?" one Casa student asked recently. "Even Todd. We have homework for Todd online," she said. "I don't get it. I'm very confused."

This student was referring to economics teacher Todd Siders, who brought his Green Careers Pathway economics class to the library's new computer lab to discover the real and hidden costs of their ecological footprints.

In an online version of a traditional stations assignment, Todd's students calculated the costs of the various aspects of their lives -- driving, shopping, eating, drinking, smoking, etc. -- they listened to podcasted instructions, added their comments to a collaborative online message board, and reflected on their learnings via an embedded Google form. Here's a link to that assignment. It was very cool. :)
 
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More and more Casa teachers are bringing their classes to the library and the computer lab lately. It's common for us to have 2 classes per period using the computers at the same time. It's also common for Casa students to have a couple of classes a day that use computers.

Casa teachers get that technology is a tool that their students need to be able to incorporate effectively into their curriculum, because it increases student engagement, which increases student achievement, which better prepares them for the college classrooms and and jobs can expect to encounter in 2010.

This is one reason why Mrs. Kelin Backman brings her English and Event Planning classes to the library to use our computers to do their work on Google Documents. Mrs. Backman would love to see Casa get class sets of the new Apple iPads. "They're awesome!" she said, "and there are so many applications for them in my classes."

 
It was one of Todd's and Mrs. Backman's students who made the bold comments at the beginning of this blog post. And after having back-to-back classes in the computer lab, I can understand why she wondered what was going on, why Casa was becoming so techy.

I was recording Mrs. Backman's commentary on the new Apple iPad video for a podcast. I recorded this student's comments as well completely by accident, and I'm so glad I did! To me, what she's saying is a sign (a very good sign, I think) of how far we've come and of where I hope we're heading. :)
 
 
 
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bighouselibrary.mypodcast.com
 

p.s. thanks to flickr user colleen af venable for her awesome creative commons art! :)
 

 
 
a_musical_collaboration.mp3
File Size: 3805 kb
File Type: mp3
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what_music_can_teach_teachers.mp3
File Size: 1869 kb
File Type: mp3
Download File

On January 29th, 2009, Casa faculty gathered in the new multi-use room for an unusual but beauitiful introduction to their professional development day: a quintet of Casa students demonstrating musical collaboration and Assistant Principal Eric Backman explaining the symbolism of it. We hope you enjoy our first Casa podcast. :)