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How to get connected with classroom 2.0 tools and most importantly how to get connected with you students. Tue, 06 Jan 2009 02:23:37 +0100 Can you spare 30 seconds?
If you can spare 30 seconds please go over to the Weblog Award’s Page http://2008.weblogawards.org/polls/best-education-blog/ and vote for me! Yes, you can go there and vote once per day. If you vote at home and work that would be super. If you are teacher send the link out to all your kids, send it out to everyone in your company, send it to everyone in your family!! There are some big sharks in that pool of finalists and I need all the help I can get.
The Weblog Awards are the world’s largest blog competition with over 545,000 votes cast in 2007 edition and nearly two million votes cast in all editions since 2003. There were over 5,000 nominations in the 48 categories. My blog is in the “Best Education Blog” category.
So if you can spare 30 seconds, I would really appreciate it if you can visit the Weblog Award’s Page http://2008.weblogawards.org/polls/best-education-blog/ and vote for me…everyday until January 12, 2008 (that’s next Monday).
Tue, 01 Apr 2008 05:07:21 +0200 I have officially bought the domain turkeycrossing.org and middleschoolsocialstudies.org! Will start working on it over the summer.
Until then you can check me out at:
http://blogush.edublogs.org My blog
http://pbogush.edublogs.org Class blog
http://collaborationnation.wikispaces.com Class wiki
Thanks to all the crazies out there still downloading my ecclectic first try at a podcast!
Sat, 15 Dec 2007 06:54:38 +0100 It has been a long time since I posted a new episode. I stopped because I ran out of "free" space and school started and I have been a little busy. This site was my first attempt at podcasting. A good start, kind of eccentric, but I can't believe how many people listen each week! I have been deciding what to do next. I have found what is missing is a podcast that talks about in detail the assignments that can be done with 2.0 tools. So I think that is where I will moving to next. Each podcast will discuss one assignment I have done with my kids utilizing a 2.0 tool with links to the directions, handouts, wiki and blog pages, student work, and all the direction and tips on how to use the 2.0 tool. A ready to go 2.0 lesson plan podcast. Stay tuned! turkeycrossing2.podomatic will start up with the beginning of the 08-09 school year and track my attempt to use wikis, podcasting, blogs, and a brand new Smartboard with 100 students all at once while also worrying about state mandated tests and covering a massive curriculum.
Fri, 21 Sep 2007 02:15:18 +0200 I am ready to think about changing the education of children beyond my four walls. What caused this change? Take a listen. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 19.41 MB here Fri, 21 Sep 2007 02:12:46 +0200 This is the first year I started all 100 kids on blogs and wiki's at the same time during the first week of school...how did it go? Take a listen. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 21.54 MB here Fri, 21 Sep 2007 01:36:20 +0200 I had a meeting during the first week of school to introduce the parents on our team to blogs, wikis, and podcasts. How did it go? Take a listen. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 29.93 MB here Wed, 19 Sep 2007 00:45:37 +0200 The first day of school is a special day for teachers and students. It sets the tone for the year. How do you set the tone on the first day of school? Do you smile and go out of your way to make the kids comfortable? or do you go out of your way to let them know who is in charge and focus on the class rules? After the first day are you kids excited about coming back for another day? or are they just thinking this is going to be another class like all the others. What do you do that is special on the first day of school? If your answer is nothing, then maybe this podcast will give you an idea or two. Come on, if you love your kids, make sure they love your class. Go out of your way to wow them and capture their imagination when their minds are wide open. Keep them open by filling it with wide open thoughts, not boring classroom rituals and overbearing rules. If you kick butt the first day, the kids won't spend the rest of the year kicking yours : ) attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 19.57 MB here Thu, 30 Aug 2007 02:38:46 +0200 Today I had tears in my eyes. Wallingford, CT's teacher of the year, Karen Ripa, gave a short presentation to all of the teachers on the eve of the 2007-08 school year. Just when I thought I could not listen to another opening day speaker Karen walked up. She gave a short presentation that include a summary of a story that she reads to her kids based on the story "Three Questions" by Leo Tolstoy, and showed a brief slide show with the song "The Children are Our Future" playing in the background. It caught me off guard. My spirit was moved. I was truly touched and inspired today, and indirectly, so too will be the life of each of my students this year. This podcast is nothing more that a big rambling thank you to Karen. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 20.17 MB here Mon, 27 Aug 2007 06:02:50 +0200 How do you get a lesson to stick? I recently read Made to Stick by Chip Heath and Dan Heath. It was the last in the perfect trilogy of books I read this summer which also included The World Is Flat and A Whole New Mind. It is a book on why some ideas die, and others thrive. They explain how to make an idea “stick.” I wrote many notes as I read the book changing the context of their writing to be more in line with helping me plan a lesson rather than a marketing campaign. All of the ideas in the podcast and PowerPoint are from the book. I decided to type them onto a file so that I would not misplace them and that turned into a PowerPoint document. I am going to post the PowerPoint on teachertube.com under the title “How do you get a lesson to stick?” http://www.teachertube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=ebc05d66a0568a333196 This podcast is simply me reading the PowerPoint presentation. While I don’t consider the PowerPoint done, I know with school starting it is probably as finished as it ever will be and decided to post it as is. Hope it helps make your lessons “stick” this year. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 24.23 MB here Sun, 26 Aug 2007 20:00:39 +0200 My brain froze last week while reading a book. I needed a break. I just could not read anymore. I had been researching and reading about the same topic for weeks and I just could not absorb or learn any more new information. It made me stop and reflect on whether or not I sometimes tend to overwork my kids. This year I’m going to make it a point to work “breaks” into our schedule allowing time for the kids to decompress and recharge. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 10.35 MB here Sun, 26 Aug 2007 19:57:52 +0200 My fingers are not touching keyboard. I am writing this using the voice recognition software that came with my laptop. I have absolutely no idea how I can use this in my classroom, but I’m sure I will find a way because I think it is pretty darn cool. If you have any ideas, or have used this with your students, please let me know. PBogush@wallingford.k12.ct.us
attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 6.28 MB here Tue, 07 Aug 2007 17:34:04 +0200 (INTRO FIXED) What is the most underrated tool in a teacher's repertoire? Humor! It might be the most underused, disrespected, most misunderstood tool a teacher possesses. It might also be one of the most effective and easily taught tools. This podcast takes a serious look at humor and is my attempt to convince someone out there to use humor with kids more often this year. Tell me a joke! If you are reading this I want you to go to the comment section and leave a joke that makes you laugh no matter how many times you hear it. Also, I am very interested in how other people purposely use humor in their classroom. This podcast went a little long so I left out how I implement the humor tool in my room, but please share how you use it!! Thanks for stopping by! Paul attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 29.1 MB here Wed, 01 Aug 2007 04:29:14 +0200 I gave my recorder to two teachers who carpool together and had them answer one question. What I learned from their response had nothing to do with their answer to the question...because, and I might have to listen again, they did not really answer it. The question was "What was the most important lesson you have ever learned from your students?" While they stayed on the question for the first minute or two, they quickly went off into another realm. They made connection after connection until they were no longer on the origional topic. Points off? That's what I would do for my kids. Wouldn't you? The next time I get an off topic response from a student I am going to pause and ask them how they got there. Their answer might be a lot deeper, meaningful, and important than the answer that I was expecting. On a piece of paper or during a class conversation you might not get the entire stream of consciousness that led to their answer. You hear the last thought, which doesn't answer the question, but maybe they already answered the question and moved on to the next more important logical thing. Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 9.73 MB here Wed, 01 Aug 2007 03:00:07 +0200 Lectures can be very effective...so what do you think about that. At least some can...well at least one or two a year under the right circumstances, or maybe everyday if given by the right person and during the right time and...well...I know that some of my best classes, most memorable classes and teachers, most life changing classes have been lectures. So you can't tell me that lectures don't work. Some do. Why? This podcast was inspired by Ginger Lewen's podcast http://gingerl.podomatic.com/ It has been on my mind for a couple of decades and just when I thought I ended the rambling podcasts, here comes another! Peace everyone! Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 16.48 MB here Thu, 26 Jul 2007 02:19:00 +0200 Do we give kids too many directions? Every year I get a class of kids who seemingly cannot operate without very explicit directions. They need to know where to go, when to go, how much, when to stop, quantity, quality, on and on... They are afraid to try something unless they have very detailed instructions which bring them right from the beginning through to the end product. They do not have any faith in themselves...they do not trust themselves enough to take a risk and be creative and innovate with their own imagination. It is a long and purposeful process I use to get kids to trust themselves enough to explore and take a chance to complete something without explicit directions. It is a magical time of the year when it does happen. Go ahead, let go of your preconceptions about how the end product of an assignment should look and give you kids fewer directions this year . Let them try to come to the end on a path that you did not show them. You never know, they might show you a new way of doing something! Music by Runaway Hudson...check them out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 26 MB here Tue, 24 Jul 2007 02:34:20 +0200 Second year teachers in Connecticut have to pass in a portfolio of a unit they prepared. These are scored from a 1 to a 4. Get a two or higher and you get your certification...score a one and, well.... For the next two weeks I will be scoring social studies portfolios. I need some help trying to figure out what should be the focus of my podcasts during the next two weeks. Are you from out-of-state and want to learn more about the BEST teacher certification program in the world? What would you like me to focus on? What would interest you? Leave the comment here or email at PBogush@wallingford.k12.ct.us Thanks! Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 3.89 MB here Sat, 21 Jul 2007 00:58:01 +0200 If you had one hour to convince your school district to allow you to use Classroom 2.0 tools what would you do? I have a meeting with the assistant superintendent in two weeks and have one hour to demonstrate to him that I should be allowed to use 2.0 tools. Since I am so new at this I don’t really have many student examples. My audience will have no prior knowledge of what a wiki is, probably has heard of a podcast and blog but never used or listened to one. The perception in my district is that the internet is full of predators that are coming to get us. I need help planning my presentation. How do I first overcome the fears? What would you do first, second, etc…I will be setting up my agenda on www.morecowbell.wikispaces.com . I will be starting to post some ideas there starting July 21, 2007. Please visit and leave me some suggestions, comments, stats to use, examples of student work, etc… I think it would be super if it could turn into a turnkey site for anyone in my shoes who is looking for help on convincing their district to go 2.0. Thank you! Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 13.83 MB here Mon, 16 Jul 2007 01:29:42 +0200 In my push to utilize all the classroom 2.0 tools everyday and connect with every part of the globe will I forget to connect with my kids? Will I forget to continue to forge the class bonds that I work very hard to create each year? In this push to connect with the rest of the world I wonder if we are forgetting to first focus on getting the kids to connect with the person next to them. How can a classroom that does not have respect, camaraderie, and love have meaningful relationships and collaboration online? I have been hearing a lot of people say that we should not ban things like myspace because the kids need to learn how to use the social network tools. I think this call might be coming from the teachers of the 2.0 movement that have that spirit in their class that would lead to meaningful "myspace" usage. I am afraid of allowing it on all of the classrooms that do not have good relationships in the classroom and with teachers that do not have any understanding of respect for kids, or are classroom 2.0 illiterate. Does collaboration need to first happen in class and then move online, or will collaborating online lead to better face-to-face relationships in the classroom? Someone help me out here.... Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 11.54 MB here Fri, 13 Jul 2007 03:24:37 +0200 Do you think it would be be a good idea to offer parents the chance to have a conference with their child's teacher from the comfort of their own home? Is there a way to have parents sign-up for conferences on our class wiki that would not step on the toes of their privacy? What will a parent conference 2.0 look like? Let me know...seriously...see that word "comments"...click it and just give me a cyberspace thumbs up or down. Music by Derek Miller attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 5.48 MB here Thu, 12 Jul 2007 02:20:03 +0200 Daddy I peed! Those were the words that inspired this podcast at 2:00 am in a tent on Cape Cod yesterday. They are words that I probably least like to her while camping. What words do you least like to hear in the classroom? Words that let you know you might have a problem or let you know you might have to pause whatever you were planning and go to plan "B." If you are a student listening to this what are the words you least like to hear come out of your teachers mouth? Music by Derek Miller -- check him out! attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 9.98 MB here Mon, 02 Jul 2007 23:57:04 +0200 Students evaluating teachers...sounds scary doesn't it. It can be for many teachers. What if we actually asked kids how we are doing? Why don't all teachers do this? I know that the evaluations I give my kids half-way through the year and again at the end have been some of my most cherished pieces of paper, and well...some of the most eye opening. I have changed and grown an incredible amount based on my students' evaluations. It really does not matter how we felt the year went, what matters most is how it went in the minds of the students. In this podcast I was going to reflect on how I have grown over the years by listening to my kids, but I think I got stuck on those few evaluations from students that thought I was just fair, and the couple of kids evaluations that thought I was m m m m m....miserable. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 17.34 MB here Wed, 27 Jun 2007 01:09:12 +0200 Ahhhh...it's over. One more school year ended today. After baking in the 95 degree heat up in the third floor, I think we all left very tired. This is the last podcast in a trilogy inspired by Kevin Honeycutt. If I could do it over again, I would not have tried to record student responses in the ovens we call our classrooms on the last day, but here ya' go.... Opening music from State of Fate attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 6.55 MB here Sat, 23 Jun 2007 15:01:31 +0200 Recently I responded to one of Kevin Honneycutt's Driving Questions podcast questions "What is one thing you would change about schools?" I then wondered what would the kids say? So I handed over the microphone and recorder to eight students and sent them up to lunch. Here is what they came back with. Your thoughts? attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 10.79 MB here Tue, 19 Jun 2007 13:23:55 +0200 Kevin Honeycutt posed a classic question on his podcast "Driving Questions." He asked, "What is one thing you would change about schools?" Here is my response...it might sound crazy, but it would work. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 14.4 MB here Thu, 14 Jun 2007 17:14:38 +0200 What can you learn from your students? Watch them carefully and they will tell you what they need and when they need it. Let them teach, and they will show you how they learn and what will engage them. This podcast was sparked by watching a group of students take over class for a day, and then having a group of "career day" speakers take over class the following day. If we open our eyes, our hearts, and relinquish our "power" in the classroom to our kids, we might learn some very valuable lessons about how we should be teaching. We should all treat our students as teachers. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 17.37 MB here Tue, 12 Jun 2007 15:52:28 +0200 Rhythm...important to music, important to teaching. Listen while I try to establish some rhythm. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 9.86 MB here Fri, 08 Jun 2007 15:21:13 +0200 Grade this podcast -- go ahead...I double dog dare you. A podcast about grades and assessments. Really, grade this podcast. But I want you to make a decision to grade it before you listen to it...not after. Notice what changes when you try to listen to this knowing you have to grade it...the same thing that happens when you try to learn something you know you will be graded on. I am serious, go ahead..grade this podcast. If you are a teacher you grade 1000's of assignments. This should be an easy task. Please don't tell me you don't have a rubric so it would be unfair, or that you don't know me. Go ahead, grade this podcast. attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 22.08 MB here Tue, 05 Jun 2007 20:33:30 +0200 Wow! This podcasting thing is much harder than I thought. It's funny how I have all these thoughts flying around in my head but the second I try to get them to come out of my mouth they become garbled and unfocused. I guess I have never really had the opportunity to vocalize or write down my "educational" thoughts and now that I try...yikes. My podcasts end up being more like a dysfunctional therapy session rather than a well thought out podcast on a focused topic. I keep thinking at the end of each one that I should start over and throw it out. But I think I am going to keep going and maybe there is a lesson in here somewhere -- especially for my kids next year when we start the class podcasts. So today I leave you with a short podcast on connecting with kids. I think if we all started thinking about how we can better connect with our kids and then talk about curriculum, technology, school design, etc...the world would be simply a much better place : ) Hey...if you read this far, leave me a comment would ya...let me know someone besides myself has seen this page. Thanks! Paul attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 14.41 MB here Fri, 01 Jun 2007 14:07:31 +0200 I trust my kids. Every opinion they give is true and honest. Why don't we use the opinions of our children to improve our teaching? Are we afraid of what we might hear if we ask and listen? A podcast inspired by K. ...opps....after listening to it I realize that I must have started pedaling faster and the recorder started to pick up a lot of wind noise half way through -- sorry! I'll drive slower next time : ) attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 18.19 MB here Thu, 31 May 2007 13:51:04 +0200 My first podcast. Just an experiment to test the recorder -- next time I will actually try to have a focus : ) attached file: type: audio/mpeg size: 11.65 MB here |