Collecting sources is
something I do on a daily basis as an on-line French teacher. I have various
locations where I gather them. I use Chrome Drive to keep a list of links by
grammatical topics. It is currently 22 pages long. I love that there is a table
of contents at the top of the first page where I can click on the topic, for
example “Verb Tenses/Moods”, and then I am taken to that list of links which I
can copy and paste into the feedback for students on their written and oral
assignments.. I have other documents in my Chrome Drive as well, such as course
specific links organized by chapter and the HTML for stickers and compliments
all ready to go in order by assignment.
I use Symbaloo to
organize professional sources, such as my links to French professional
organizations and professional development pages. I also have a LiveBinder
account that I started when I first came to teach with GAVS. I organized it for
the French 2 class when I was teaching it but haven’t visited that account in
several years, as I no longer teacher French 2.
The Symbaloo above was made specifically for this quest. The white tiles are the web eval resources collected, while the green (tech tools), orange (reference tools), teal (online courses), and yellow (exercises and games) tiles are for students.
The Symbaloo above was made specifically for this quest. The white tiles are the web eval resources collected, while the green (tech tools), orange (reference tools), teal (online courses), and yellow (exercises and games) tiles are for students.
As I read the
information on evaluating websites, I was pleased to realize that I do many of
the steps for validating authenticity already. I felt really smart and in tune!
J I did find it humorous that a webpage containing
a broken link should raise eyebrows, considering that the Media Awareness
Network and its media literacy link in the TOOL course Participate 2.1.1 quest
results in a “page not found”. One thing that I have not ever done is use a
site like Alexa to research statistics about a website. I am excited to know
how to do this and to share this information with my students. I also noticed
that Media Literacy week is coming up Nov. 2-6 and I have already created a
News item for my course homepage to offer an activity related to the goal of
increasing awareness. I will use this
opportunity to teach/review for students how to safely collect tools and
resources to help them maximize their learning. One way to ensure that students
use some of these techniques during the course is to have them document their
procedures with screenshots in a running blog journal for the semester to which
they can submit the link at each due date. I also think another effective way
to teach students to be diligent in selecting their resources is to create a
sort of internet scavenger hunt during which they can earn badges (which could
interpret to extra points or a homework pass) as they progress through various
stages of the hunt.
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