Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Pros/Cons Sheet for Webquest

Pros/Cons Worksheet

Environmental & Physical

PRO CON

Built in one area Farms

Less damage A lot of trees need to be cut down

Not a lot of trees Middle of nowhere

Built near major road Not a lot of people will use it

Has a purpose Over a river (must build a bridge too)

No animal habitat Two areas are affected

Animals may live there

Cultural Effects

PRO CON

Easier to drive Costs more money

More people will go shopping Take longer to build

Can use the same stop lights and signs Need new lights and signs

No new houses will be built People will build houses on side of road

Less traffic

Label and Feature List

List of Features and Labels

  1. Road Names
  2. Roads
  3. Legend
  4. Scale
  5. Grid
  6. Terrain
  7. Latitude
  8. Longitude
  9. Placemark Option A
  10. Placemark Option B
  11. Title
  12. Compass Rose

Sunday, October 28, 2007

FiB Chapter 10

Although I really liked the idea of a Week Without Walls (teaching students through projects outside the classroom), I felt the most important part of chapter ten was providing internship opportunities to students during the summer months.
By providing internships teachers are both allowing students to experience real world situations and providing them a scenario where education is applicable. This is essential for students to begin to realize the value of their schooling, as well as showing them some of the opportunities that different subject areas can create. More importantly, it gives students an experience that will probably change their lives and better help prepare them for life beyond graduation.

FiB Chapter 9

I had somewhat of an “ah-ha” moment while reading chapter nine. This occurred when I came across a heading that stated: Don’t judge your success by whether students like you. I feel that this is a valuable piece of advice that too few teachers really take to heart.
The students voiced their opinions that a teacher’s main job is to teach and that students will respect and appreciate that teacher if they are learning. This is important because obviously someone in the teaching profession cares about their students and wants them to appreciate, respect, and genuinely like them as a person. Hearing students say that as long as you are doing your job it does not matter was really an eye-opener. I think Vance said it best when he stated that as long as you do your job, the bond you are seeking with students will develop on its own.

FiB Chapter 8

Being someone who can only speak English teaching ELL students would probably be my most difficult task as a teacher. Two students (Rafael and Elaine) both emphasized the importance of being patient and allowing time for students to full comprehend and respond to new material.

This jumped out at me because my family is currently living with a foreign exchange student from Korea, and she informed us that the hardest part about school is reading English and than translating it into her foreign language. This takes considerable time, thus the expectations for ELL students must be somewhat lowered and allowed revisions, redrafts, and extensions. However, several students pointed out the fact that as teachers we should expect the best out of our students, and keep our expectations in line with those for the rest of the class. The only difference is we must allow for time and revisions to help them along the way. An important fact to remember: they are studying both social studies AND English; this applies to every single class they have!

FiB Chapter 7

I found two concepts in chapter seven that I think are linked and are extremely important, if not essential, for student motivation and appreciation of social studies. The first was focusing on big ideas or themes, and the second was asking open-ended questions to encourage debate and student interaction.

A subject as broad and plentiful as history or geography truly needs to be narrowed down into main themes, big ideas, or important questions. If the material is presented in such a manner that encourages interaction students will leave caring about history, recognizing its relevance in today’s society, and may even end up liking it. The examples of slavery and pilgrims were great because they showed the complex relationships between two different groups of people and how their environments shaped their mindsets. By learning this students can better understand history and develop their own ideas as to how we can avoid letting history repeat itself (one of the main important aspects students mentioned in the book). This turns social studies into a relevant subject that holds true importance, rather than a stereotypical class where memorization of dates and names has been stressed.

FiB Chapter 6

Provide role models to inspire us. I could not agree more, because most of the causes for unmotivated students are that they do not see the relevance to life that their subject is teaching besides earning a diploma.

I immediately began to think of way I could do this in my classroom. I thought of bringing in a holocaust survivor, someone who served in Vietnam or a person who is in a high paying job related to geography. However, I believe that the most effective method would be to ask former students to come back to the class and explain how learning the material helped better prepare them for both college and the “real world.” This would be an effective method because it would display the importance of learning (and thus success) in the classroom by bringing in someone who had the class, that knows the students, and can serve as a positive local role model that can truly relate to their experiences.