Engaging Students Through Digital Tools

              One of the biggest challenges we
face as teachers is maintaining the attention of our students and increasing
their involvement in the learning process.  There are always students who are highly
motivated to learn and eagerly participate in all activities, but how do we reach
students who seem disengaged from the learning environment?

Of course, we strive to create a positive classroom ecology, provide
stimulating content and cooperative learning. These techniques are useful
strategies for engaging students. However, sometimes it can be helpful to
integrate digital tools to improve our pedagogical practices.   I have
found some platforms this year to help increase engagement even from students
who are reluctant learners or are less motivated. Two of my colleagues in the
Modern Language Department, Kristy Parsons-McClain and Sandra Cardenas
introduced me to Blooklet and Gimkit.

With these technology tools, you can find or create “learning sets”
according to what you are studying. The platforms are a little bit like Kahoots
but more sophisticated and visually pleasing. From the student’s perspective,
it is like playing a video game where they get to practice vocabulary and
grammar structures. The students love these games and report they that they
feel that it helps them to practice the grammar structures and vocabulary. It
also provides good data for the students to see how they are progressing and
for me to see if students are acquiring the language. The other tech tools that
I have incorporated this year are EdPuzzles, and PearDecks and I will be
testing out GoFormative and Garbanzo this semester.

Instagram and French (Part 1)

This semester, I started out the first unit in all of my French classes with a totally new way of doing homework. It mainly stemmed from the fact that I’ve been struggling with homework in my teaching here because a.) I still really haven’t figured out how to grade hundreds of weekly assignments and give meaningful feedback in a way that still allows me to experience some semblance of a life outside of work, and b.) many students were not able to keep up with their assignments in French for whatever reason and were sabotaging their grades during the first semester.
So this winter, I devised a weekly project that allows students to submit homework via a medium that they’re already using on a daily basis: Instagram. I crafted a series of rules and criteria to follow in order for us to create our own network within the social media site, offering weekly assignments students were to post about, as well as an accompanying Google Form to give me suggestions for future assignments, report what they learned each week (in terms of content and what new nuggets of information they learned from their fellow classmates), and practice new French vocabulary or grammar covered each week. Further, I created my own French account to provide students with comprehensible input in the target language and models for what they could publish each week. I also wanted to give myself the experience of being a student alongside them each week. Feel free to check out my page (as well the students’ comments) here!
My ground rules for this project were to be kind and supportive of one another, to only use French, and not to use a translator (I strongly encouraged my students to make mistakes on their sites). They were to post three times a week outside of class, and periodically in class when activities called for it.
I’ll be honest: I was expecting every one of my students to be totally onboard right from the get-go. It can sometimes be a struggle to get kids off of social media, so I expected this to be a hit… but that wasn’t necessarily the case. That said, it did take some students a week or two to warm up to the idea, and some flat out didn’t enjoy it at all, but I quickly noticed higher homework completion rates over the past month and a half than I’d seen the entire first semester and that was encouraging to observe.
The project also completely surprised me in a different way: some of the students really have taken to this activity. They posted more than the minimum requirements week in and week out. They were being really kind and encouraging to one another. They were learning more about me as a person and I was learning more about them in such a short period of time. They were posting pictures of their classmates in other classes (sorry if they interrupted a chem lab or math problem to share it on their French Instagram pages…). They were sharing their pages with other students who aren’t in my French classes and only interacting with those students in French, or jokingly asking then “en français s’il vous plaît” when those students posted on their pages in English. Students in different periods and different classes followed one another. I also provided students with links to French-speaking celebrities (politicians, athletes, actors, singers, bloggers, etc.) and students interacted with native speakers and learned real-world vocabulary from scrolling through their feeds!
I did run into a few hiccups when three sets of parents notified me that they didn’t want their child on social media, when a student lost his device, and when a student broke his phone and couldn’t use it to record video. For those rare instances, I had the students submit their videos, pictures, and sentences through Google Docs in Schoology. I worry they didn’t get the full experience of the other students, but they were still able to contribute and check in on my page from the web browser version of Instagram to get the same input as their classmates.
In terms of my time management and grading, I felt like this was an extremely simple way to neatly organize a portfolio of student work for the entire unit. I created one giant Google Spreadsheet with links to each of the students’ pages internally. When students did research or poster projects, I had them record videos and submit them to their IG pages. I used student videos as comprehension exercises in class (instead of the same boring two actors my book uses). I asked students to make commercials. Students had to tag one another and ask each other questions (and then respond to anyone who’d asked them questions – just as I did when three students tagged me and asked me questions). And because I pretty much always have my phone on me, I could check in on their feeds throughout the day and comment back on student posts, giving them nearly real-time feedback on their work. I graded their posts once a week in PowerSchool based off a completion rubric I made.
The most amazing and meaningful thing I’ve taken away from this project is how quickly I got to learn about my students. My daily classroom interactions seem more meaningful and connected than they felt in the past. Last semester, a student might make a comment about their interests in class, but I would soon forget because my brain is like a Chrome browser with a million tabs open. However, after seeing a post of a student brushing her horse, and when she mentioned she liked horses in class, I remembered the post and immediately asked her more specific questions about her horse in French. In that moment, she knew that I had read her post, that I remembered it, and that I genuinely wanted to know more about her life.
On the other hand, the students also got to learn a lot more about me as a person. They now know all my pets (and husband) by name and they ask me how they’re doing periodically, they know my favorite French singers, the movies I like, and what kind of food I enjoy eating. Since they were all so brave and open in trying out this new project and in sharing personal details with me and their classmates during the month (they sang, played instruments, juggled, spoke for an entire minute in uninterrupted French, vlogged, introduced me to their friends and family, posted jokes to French-speaking celebrities, and so much more) I also put myself in a vulnerable position in solidarity and posted a video of me singing for them in French!
Since finishing this first unit on Tuesday, I’ve begun collecting student surveys and their overall thoughts on the project that I will share in a future post. I already know that this project has its ups and downs, so along with student feedback, I am beginning to make modifications for our next unit of study. Oh, and in two weeks I am attending a conference workshop with another French teacher who’s successfully integrated Instagram into his classroom experience. More to come soon!

NPR Student Podcast Challenge

While browsing my social media feed last night, I stumbled across this article shared by a former colleague: As of this morning, NPR is launching a Student Podcast Challenge for students and teachers in grades 5-12.

The concept is simple: “Take a topic, a lesson or a unit you’re learning about, and turn it into a podcast” on SoundCloud ranging from 3-12 minutes in length. Schools can submit entries from January 1, 2019 to March 31, 2019 at 11:59 p.m. E.T. A panel of NPR judges will pick two winners representing grades 5-8 and 9-12.

If you’re on the fence I’ve had non-native speaking French students make podcasts at all levels of their language study, and it’s incredible what they can do!

Students in the past have made for my classes weather announcements, current events round-ups, and even created commercials for ideal schools that they designed after studying about the educational systems in the French-speaking world. Podcasts are a fun way to wrap up a unit with a summative assessment. The students are responsible for explaining and demonstrating what they’ve learned during their study of a particular unit.

Perhaps this challenge speaks to you…. 🙂

Knowing Technologies

Knowing Technologies Campfire PD session June 13th at Mercy High School



I was able to attend the inaugural professional development campfire put on by one of our partners, Knowing Technologies. I want to shout out the director, a De La Salle alum and past teacher, Jim Puccetti.


I loved that the presenters were other educators from private and charter schools. We have similar experiences and can learn a lot from others. I love hearing what has been successful for other educators regarding technology in and out of the classroom.  My favorite takeaways were:



Having students use the touchcast app.  This app allows students to create and edit videos using a green screen.  I loved examples i saw and how easy it would be to create dynamic and engaging videos in my classes.  There are some great tutorials on youtube to check out!

Another app I look forward to trying next school year is called clips. It is another video app that students can use to create short videos.  What makes clips special is you can add labels, emojis and subtitles. I think it would be a lot of fun for the students to add some ‘flair to their video clips. Their personalities can shine through as well as they can edit clips to include phrases and other information. There is an in depth tutorial video here. ’


*I was lucky enough to attend with Janine Orr and Ashley Mangini too!

Cryptology and Encryption

This week’s activity had students exploring cryptology with an activity to encode and decode messages using the Caesar cipher and Vignenère cipher.  Although our computers don’t use a Caesar or Vignenère cipher, this activity helped students to start thinking about security and encryption.  


Can YOU crack this ciphertext? 


Fdurqghohw


What is Caesar cipher? 


One of the earliest and simplest attempts at encryption is the Caesar cipher, employed by Julius Caesar in the 1st century BC. This schema is known as a substitution cipher because it substitutes each letter of the original, unencrypted message (called the plaintext) with a corresponding letter in the final, encrypted message (called the ciphertext).
The Caesar cipher works by aligning two alphabets against one another and offsetting them by a number of positions. Caesar, himself, used a “left rotation” of three spaces, causing an a of the plaintext to align with an x in the ciphertext. (Edhesive.com)



Using Blocks to Learn about Computers



This past week, as part of the AP Computer Science Principals class, I had my students playing with wooden blocks.  What do wooden blocks have to do with technology and computer science?  Well, the activity was designed to give students hands-on experience giving directions and acting like a computer.  


In this group exercise, students wrote and executed their first “program.”  Since most students haven’t already learned any programming languages, we used English.  And instead of executing the programs on an actual computer (which wouldn’t understand English as well as people do), the groups role-played the parts of a simulated computer as they attempted to execute the program in much the same way a real computer would run a real program.  

Untangling Tech from Procedure

Many moons ago, as an elementary school librarian, I read and adopted Harry Wong’s classroom management strategies. I was working at a library that had a fixed schedule for library visits.  I, of course, wanted to create excitement for the library and the wonders it held, but I learned if I took the time at the beginning of the year to explain and implement processes and procedures, the class visits yielded so much more wonder and excitement to students over the year. Taking the time to adjust and to provide quick feedback when things started to go awry as students learned these procedures caused a slower start to what I knew was the great stuff. But when we got to the great stuff, the rules of the road established early allowed for greater freedom as year progressed.

I was reminded of all this at a recent training. I hadn’t taken the time to secure the procedures. I made the assumption all would have the Schoology and Adobe apps on their iPads. I did not think through some screenshots. I had to work through the miasma of forgotten passwords. It was painful and a little embarrassing. It took up time I could not spare.

I had to remember, though, that this was a failure in procedure, not technology. What felt like a disastrous waste of time could be seen, in a classroom, as the slow start to creating a procedure. Yes, it took a half hour for everyone to download the apps. In a classroom that means the next time the iPads would have the apps. Yes, passwords are forgotten, but if they are used daily they are not forgotten. Yes, not all the could complete the assignment. But in a classroom, next time they could.

Passwords and registrations, downloads and installs may be the bane of the ed tech world. But they are the necessary procedures that allow for the magic to happen.