Thursday, February 5, 2015

Technology Teach-In: Google Forms

Teachers (mentors and interns) at my placement are teaching a genre study Science Fiction unit in the coming weeks. This unit is pretty novel and exciting considering that Scarlett, along with Mitchell Elementary and Huron High School are moving toward accepting the IB framework, and this is the first lesson being planned using the IB unit planner and framework. It is exciting because it is new, but most especially because the IB framework is fundamentally student-centered. From what I understand, not having been to the training like my mentor teacher, International Baccalaureate schools use an inquiry-based approach to education. Students are at the center of this inquiry, and these are classrooms in which lessons are based on student developed inquiry questions and interests. Some teachers are apprehensive about this move, and I think that those apprehensions are primarily linked to a feeling that in a student-centered approach, teachers lose some of their control. Teachers move from being student-directors to facilitators of student learning, and oftentimes act as cooperative learners along with students. 

Part of the IB unit planner insists on students becoming more globally conscious both in their thinking, and in their use of technology to connect with and research various perspectives. In thinking about this "Tech Teach-In" assignment, I considered that technology could be entirely useful for this unit because it supports the IB framework, supports one of the major themes of Science Fiction in which there is generally futuristic technology that both positively and negatively affects a protagonist, and provides students an avenue to research and explore their own perspective as well as the perspectives of others. 

I am not the lead-teacher on this unit, however the role that my mentor teacher and I have discussed me playing in this unit, is acting as facilitator of student reflection through technology. We have signed out the computer labs for both Wednesdays and Thursdays throughout the five weeks of the unit. Students will use Google Forms two ways. One way will act as a check for understanding, where students are simply answering a short comprehension quiz on the novel they are reading. The second way, which is entirely more interesting to me, is as a way to explore their own inquiry questions. These Forms will be referred to as "Weekly Posts" where students are reflecting on the novel they are reading, the inquiry questions that the teacher poses, as well as the key concepts of the unit, in order to develop and explore their own interests. 

These Forms will consist of main unit inquiry questions like, "Does scientific advancement help or harm humanity?" and students will be asked to give information on whether what they are reading in their novels supports, challenges or adds to their initial answers to these questions. They should then form their own questions, based on what they are most interested in exploring in their novel. We will take these student-generated questions, and use them as topics for small-group discussion (perhaps grouping students by interest, if that seems applicable). Overall, I think that Google Forms is going to play a central, constant role in the inquiry approach throughout the unit. I know that there will probably be some hiccups with technology, however, all of my students have Google Accounts provided by the school, and we are providing them opportunities in class to do this work. I anticipate that this will run fairly smoothly. 

6 comments:

  1. Hearing about some of the details of the IB program is exciting! I can understand why some teachers might be a bit nervous about relinquishing some of the control! I think the google forms is a nice addition to the novel. I think it is similar to journaling, but more efficient. This is much easier to share with other and see how their thoughts develop over time much more easily. I'm excite to see how this unit goes. Good luck!

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  2. I'm most intrigued by this specific, targeted idea for using google forms to provide a meaningful context for student reflection. To be sure, it's clear that you're taking seriously the IB philosophy around student ownership of learning, and I'm excited for you to be able to see the impact of brining student voice into the center of the conversation, and the curriculum.
    I'll also be interested in hearing more from you about what you observe (or what the students have to say, if it's possible to get some purchase on that) about the added value brought by the technology. This elegant idea has the potential to work powerfully on multiple levels, and I look forward to reading about your planning, teaching and reflections for the next time.

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  3. Hey Jessica,

    I am really glad that you posted this; my district accepted and adopted the IB framework last year, did work on it, and then IB changed the format this year. So we have to make all new unit plans. As such I have been involved in several planning meetings surrounding the creation of IB Unit plans, and would love to talk about it with you! You are absolutely right though, that IB emphasizes the inquiry-based model, although what I have found, is if you delve deep enough, you are actually being trained through the MAC program to teach in a very IB way (some of the terminology is different, but the concepts are very similar; just write a little translation list. :) when it comes to your Google Forms idea, I am curious, is the google form basically going to act as a paperless way to get all of their thoughts in one place (that already sounds appealing), or are their plans to augment the Forms with other apps or services down the road? Please keep us informed!

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  4. -Jessica
    I think using google forms is an excellent way for students to share their thoughts and inquiries! It will be awesome to be able to access these documents anywhere with internet so that way you can continually monitor student progress and confusion. I feel like there have been many journals in classrooms before, but this way making it online on google forms it makes it more accessible and relevant to todays students. It's also nice that if shared with you, these documents could be a way to interact with the students and keep in touch with what they are thinking.
    I think the IB curriculum is smart in making school more student-centered. It will be interesting to see if students grow more because they are given more autonomy with their studies.

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  5. Jessica,

    It sounds like Google Forms is going to be a great tool for you to use for this assignment. In my placement we use Google Forms for the weekly quizzes that students take, and it makes grading fast and easy. It sounds like you're using many open-ended questions, but if you have any multiple choice/fill-in-the-blank type questions then I suggest that you use an add-on called Flubaroo. Flubaroo will automatically grade for you on a multiple choice test, and it saves SO much time! Unfortunately (and obviously) it doesn't work for any extended response questions, but if you ever need a quick grading tool, Flubaroo is amazing. Like the others who have commented, I love using Forms because it places all of the student work in one place. It also makes student work extremely accessible and saves you from carrying a stack of papers home at night. Let me know how it goes with Google Forms, and if you need any help let me know!

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  6. Jessica!

    I think that because we are both at the same placement we see how some teachers are happy/not happy about this transition in curriculum. I think it wonderful that you have deep knowledge about the potential transition and that your mentor teacher knows a great deal about the IB program. I like how you are using this current knowledge to inform your practice of implementing a google doc and student centered activity. Holly mentioned a great tool to consider as well: flubaroo. I think that I too agree that google forms will provide a constant and central role in prompting student-centered inquiry. I look forward to hearing how you activity went!

    warmest regards,
    Sara

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