Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Interactivity 5



I interviewed a middle school math teacher from the Clifton school district in Clifton, New Jersey.  He teaches Algebra to eighth graders.  I conducted an email interview for accessibility.  I know this teacher personally and I know how busy he is with the curriculum as well as tutoring students.  Sending an email made it easier for him to respond and it also recorded the responses in an email.  When I brought up the NETS to this teacher he had no idea what I was talking about.  He had never heard of them.  He actually stated that his school district hasn’t implemented them, nor does he believe the state of New Jersey has either.  I highly doubt NJ is not implementing these standards.  I asked the teacher what he thought of these standards.  He said, “I think with proper funding and access to technology tools, these could be helpful to our students.  I do, however, think these are very vague standards and may not properly address the growing need for people going into the workforce to be more than just technologically proficient.  These are great ideas and can be implemented, but I think students would need proper access to computers and tablets.  At this point in time, I don't think a computer lab or a handful of computers in each classroom is going to do the trick.  Unfortunately, budget cuts and politics get in the way sometimes.”
            This teacher stated that they have a different set of standards that incorporate technology across the curriculum.  I have talked to this teacher before and the standards he has to incorporate are the Common Core Standards.  Surprisingly I was not thrown off by any of the responses this teacher gave.  He articulated that to really implement these standards, the district would need to provide more technology for the students and staff to use.  He also stated that the staff would need to receive education on the new technologies they would have to implement into the classroom.  With budget cuts, school districts are going to have a hard time to write technology into the budget.  I would tend to agree with this teacher.  The budget is where technology is going to be cut, until these standards are put into action. 
            As a future teacher I would bring up the NETS-S or the NETS-T during any conversation that involves the integrating of technology into the classroom.  If these are the standards that teachers are going to have to live by in regards to technology, teachers have to learn about them.  I would agree with this teacher about them being a little vague.  They are going to be a great tool for us to regulate the use of technology in the classroom, but they are a bit vague on what the different standards actually mean.  Obviously, when speaking to another educator, we would have to discuss the different standards and what they mean and how to incorporate them into our classrooms.    


Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Interactivity 4

Google Doc:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Alcm0RZRU5kbdGJKRS1HWkFCS0o2aVZqYWRPdFBEYUE&usp=sharing

This lesson plan was all about gas economy and how much you are actually spending on a car when you initially buy it.  This lesson plan is relevant to high school students who will be looking into purchasing their first car.  They are only making a small paycheck due to age or availability and so they need to make sure their paycheck doesn't get wasted on just gas for their car.  This lesson opens their eyes to actually researching a car before buying it.  If the student already has a car they can, by the end of the lesson, figure out how much they are spending on gas as well as what the optimal mileage for their car would be.  This is why I chose this lesson plan.  It brings mathematics that are standard curriculum to an everyday scenario that my students would be facing.  They will be figuring out averages as well as finding a function that best fits the data they have collected.  With this information they can figure out the speed range in which their car gets the best gas mileage.
I may be overlooking something but I feel that the standards were in line with the strategies and the technology used.  I added a few things but they were minor.  This lesson was all about collecting data and being able to graph it, find the function that best fits the data, and then interpret it and answer questions using the function derived by the data.
These technologies made the lesson go by smoother and made the content easier to understand.  The teacher would be teaching the content step by step with visual representation to go along with it.  Having both of these representations help all students to grasp the information and retain it for later use.