1st, 5th, and 6th Graders Making Movies About Bus Safety, Autobiographies, and the Solar System

October 19, 2009

At Cameron ES, a September training was conducted on Photo Story and Movie Maker. The goal was to get cameras into the hands of teachers who in turn would do the same for kids. The results have been fabulous! Students and teachers at various grade levels are creating photo stories and mini movies that are posted to Blackboard for all to see. The principal spotlights some of them on Cameron Morning News.

Grade 1
School Bus Stop Safety
Students created a mini movie to discuss the importance and procedures for exercising good safety tips for the bus and walkers. Students created posters in groups with various tips and then generated their scripts from the posters.

Grade 5
Social Studies
Students created timelines of their lives, including pictures and memorabilia, on poster board. They took photos of each timeline and narrated them using Photo Story. Students enjoyed sharing their videos with family on Blackboard.

Grade 6
Language Arts
The principal works with a small reading group daily. After reading about the solar system and the planets, kids created posters and a script to create a Photo Story about the Solar System. The kids were engaged and loved the entire process from start to finish.


Education and Technology coming together….

March 4, 2009

At Dranesville ES, upper grade students designed snow flakes in Geometer’s Sketchpad and imported them into PowerPoint. In PowerPoint, students learned how to animate the snowflakes into “falling snow.” With these animations, they added winter poetry and winter scenes drawn in Pixie. In addition, some classes are combining all of the individual slides into one “class PowerPoint” adding music and/or narration.

 

To help support and prepare 5th graders for the Global Awareness Project,  Colvin Run 5th graders have completed research projects on MesoAmerica using PhotoStory and are starting a WebBlender project.  As a kickoff for the project five teachers, the librarian, SBTS and GT Resource Specialist each chose a different question from the eight guiding project questions and prepared a sample GAP project.  These projects use different technology applications: Publisher, Inspiration, PhotoStory, WebBlender, and Power Point.  Students participated in a ”GAP Museum Walk”, spending a few minutes listening to a presentation for each of the eight project.  This helped jump start student thinking about their project before they choose the question and topic they will be researching.  

 

At Great Falls ES, teachers and students are busy using technology as a tool for learning and teaching.  Fourth grade students are using dialogue blogs in FCPS 24-7 as reading responses and they are doing current events journals where they are finding lots of articles from online kids’ newspapers.  Kindergarten students are becoming quite savvy using Pixie 2 to take a snowman adventure.  Students drew pictures of snowmen in various settings (in space, at the firestation, in the jungle, along a Native American camp) and will be working to add text and voice recordings about their snowman’s adventure.  Students will share their story in their classroom as well as on the morning announcement TV show.  Second grade students created slideshows in Pixie about the lifecycle of crickets and are working on Animal Classification movies in Photostory.


Neighborhood D – Updated

October 29, 2008

There have been many things going on in the neighborhood D schools since the beginning of this year.  It is nice to be past the first month and focus on instructional best practices with technology.

Blackboard and blog implementation have been on the rise in all schools. SBTS and teachers are working to use Blackboard in an instructional way and finding ways to increase use at school and at home. Teachers are reinforcing content in many subject areas and working on writing skills through the use of the blog and discussion board.
Co-teaching with Teachers is a priority in all our schools. We are attending team meetings, co-teaching lessons, modeling lessons, meeting with students through Tech Teams and special assignments, and planning with teachers on short and long projects.

We are all involved in school planning, testing, and other school leadership roles.

Currently, our neighborhood is discussing options for a neighborhood-wide training.

For more information on any of these activities, please contact the School Bases Technology Specialists in Neighborhood D; Canterbury Woods, Daniels Run, Fairhill, Kings Glen, Kings Park, Laurel Ridge, Little Run, Mantua, Mosby Woods, Olde Creek, Ravensworth and Wakefield Forest.


Happenings in the Hinterlands of FCPS

October 7, 2008

Welcome to the Hinterlands in Fairfax County!  We are excited to share all the wonderful things going on in our schools and how we as a neighborhood are supporting instruction and each other as we meet the needs of our diverse school communities.  Due to the varied needs or our teachers and students, our neighborhood of SBTS focuses on supporting the differentiated instructional needs of each community.  Below are just a few of the things we have done in the past and a few of our ideas for the upcoming year.

  • Students at Great Falls Elementary participated in a project integrating technology in a study of the famous photographer, Ansel Adams.  Students used digital cameras to take black and white photographs of nature in the style of Ansel Adams. Students were engaged in discussions and activities related to perspective and learned many different skills related to using digital cameras.  We are excited to extend this project during the 08-09 school year to a study of Portraits of Power of Richard Avedon.
  • Forestville administrators have their own blog on the staff Blackboard course.  They have been using the blog to start professional conversations about technology, PLC, and other topics.
  • Colvin Run students in different grade levels are using digital recorders and Audacity to create content-based podcasts that are posted on the school’s website or teacher’s Blackboard sites:  6th graders Explorer podcasts, 1st graders Animal Research, 4th grade Virginia Minute, 5th graders Math review and class books in primary grades to created to increase reading fluency. In lieu of a school newspaper, a group of fifth & sixth grade students create podcasts that demonstrate what is happening around school so every grade level has online informatioin in the form of podcasts about their learning.  After a summer course in which 15 teachers participated, Colvin Run teachers have focused on integrating SmartBoards with their daily instruction. The boards have been used in as centers and in small and large group instruction.
  • Herndon Elementary school purchased 33 SMARTBoards, 32 projectors, and 41 carts in the past year.  They now have a SMARTBoard and a projector in every general education classroom.  They are currently working hard to integrate this equipment.  Many teachers are taking the “Building Lessons for The Interactive Whiteboard” class this fall.  They are planning on starting  a SMARTBoard “Support Group” to share ideas for implementation and integration.
  • Kindergartners at Forest Edge ES are video conferencing with their 3rd grade pen pals in New Jersey allowing teachers to test the process. 

Tyson Techies Past Celebrations 07-08

August 8, 2008

As an SBTS neighborhood we have celebrated many successes this past school year both instructionally and technically. However, the main focus of our job is the impact we have on teachers and instruction. Here are some of our favorite instructional technology celebrations from the 2007-2008 school year.

  • As a group we organized a mini- conference entitled “Ed Tech Expo.” Teachers from over 20 schools were invited to attend and learn new and innovative ways to infuse technology into their instruction. We had a great turn out, of both presenters and attendees. However, the real power or impact this conference had, happened not during the conference, but afterward when teachers applied what they learned there. One instance was with a second grade teacher who was introduced to a program called ”Scratch,” a free program where students can use creativity and problem solving skills to create and animate pictures and scenes.  (Learn more about scratch here http://scratch.mit.edu/.)  The teacher was so impressed she went back to her home school to share with her teammates so that they could begin using it as tool in their classroom. (Franklin Sherman)
  • Essential vocabulary is an instructional focus for teachers particularly in the clusters where Marzano’s Building Background Knowledge, book had been emphasized. To promote the learning of essential vocabulary and giving the students control of their learning, Lemon Road ES began using recorders (small mp3 players) to make digital dictionaries. The students were responsible for researching the term and then creating the recording. The recordings were then put into a PowerPoint to create an index using a simple teacher created template of an image, definition of the word, use in a sentence, and the recording.  This project really helped focus on essential knowledge and brought in several learning styles for differentiating instruction.  Sally Bryan, the school SBTS, wrote a Best Buy grant and from it recieved $2000 to purchase the mp3 players.
  • Over at Shrevewood ES, the teachers began to use audacity to check for fluency for their ESOL students.
  • New SBTS, Carrie, used audacity and mp3 players last year in her 4th grade classroom to help differentiate lessons for students without a lot of parental support at home to help with homework not on their own grade level.  They posted recordings of the teacher or other students reading the assignments to the students. They received a grant through speech and language, to help pay for the mp3 players.

We had a great year last year, making a difference in the lives of teachers and students in FCPS. We look forward to posting many more celebrations this year too!