Friday, August 2, 2013

Activity 10: Free Choice

At first I wanted to try Goodreads for my classroom (because I already use it for personal use), but it, along with Shelfari, have a minimum age of 13.  I wasn't interested in the social learning sites because of the age of my students, or the social bookmarking sites because I'm already deep into Pinterest.  I'm already a Twitter user and wouldn't use it for parents/students at this age level.  I'm familiar with Animoto.  I wanted something practical that I would definitely use.  I will come back to Rubistar and self-correcting google forms once I know my content area better.  (I'm switching grade levels.)

So, along with my three teammates in the Web 2.0 class, we decided to work more with Weebly.

This was fun and totally practical.  Our 3rd Grade team wanted to created an umbrella website for our grade level, with all of the homerooms, math, language arts and unit studies teachers' websites linked underneath.  We'd all used different platforms in the past for our websites, so we opted to try Weebly because of the ability to switch to a blog format on some pages.  Also, the 5th grade team at our school uses Weebly, and we'd heard that 4th was moving in that direction, so we thought consistency across the grade levels would be helpful to parents.

We also undertook the job of "selling" it to our teammates, since none of them had used Weebly in the past.  Success!  We had a team meeting yesterday, and we'd developed a skeleton framework to show them, and they were all on board.

Here is the link to our brand new website, which is still a work in progress.

Island Lake 3rd Grade Website

The buttons for linking to the MV, Island Lake and Schoolview websites are all live.  I also put a link on my Language Arts (Nelson) page for my screencast made in this class.  There is a lot more work to do and some training to do for our other teammates, but I think this will be a very useful website for parents to use when trying to locate information about their child's various teachers' classes.  The consistency across grade levels will be an advantage, and being able to share and inter-link within the website for us teachers is another plus.  As we work on this, I'm thinking we can even add a Student button, where students can go to locate educational websites, videos, etc. -- a "one-stop shop."  I do plan to do a blog format in one or more areas to update parents on what we've been covering.

5 comments:

  1. Anne-
    Pinterest is great, but I would consider taking a second look at a bookmarking site. The more you use online resources, the more difficult they are to keep track of. I personally like Diigo and Symbaloo. I use Symbaloo as my homepage. And have tabs for bookmarks for my various needs, personal, by course, tech tools, etc. I think you might actually find it helpful for student and personal use. Just a thought...

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  2. Love this idea and how your guys were able to get the team to buy into using it together. The format you set it up in is easy to find what you need at a glance. Very user friendly. I like your screencast on How to find the Right Fit book. Can I use it?

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  3. Good reflecting Anne. I think our website will become more useful as we get into the year and decide how to present what we need. Right now I am not quite sure how to use our new skills most effectively!

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  4. Your new website looks great! I think you will really appreciate having everything in one place as the year starts. Your parents and students will also appreciate the convenience factor!

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  5. Nice website! I am glad you can make something that you will actually use!

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