For our group inquiry, Denee, Dane, Jessica, and I looked at using Apps in Outdoor Education.
Here is a screencast of our slides! Feel free to pause and look at the slides as you go!
Tessa Webb
Develop positive and supportive connections with students and colleagues, building professional learning networks
For our group inquiry, Denee, Dane, Jessica, and I looked at using Apps in Outdoor Education.
Here is a screencast of our slides! Feel free to pause and look at the slides as you go!
FreshGrade (Sam, Mitra, Jess S.)
Includes
FreshGrade & FreshGrade NEXT
Features
bobka – Anne
Google Teacher
OpenED!
Keiro’s presentation – stop-go animation
stop motion (can be downloaded)
used imovie to fade into the graphic
Photo shop
Pros
Cons
Things to watch for
REsources
Google Geographic Products
Google Maps
Google Earth
Lesson Ideas
Lessons – My Maps
Privacy
cartography has nationalism built into it. Originally the way that countries were delineated.
Digital Literacy
Information Literacy
Ethical use
Understanding digital footprint
Protecting yourself online
Handling digital communication – cyberbullying
Pros & Cons
Risks
Strategies, Tips, and Best Practice
Parents and Dig Lit
Sex, sexuality and the digital world
House hippo – media smarts
On Monday, October 21 our ED 336 class went to Rebecca Bathurst-Hunt’s class to have a look at her classroom set-up and speak with her about how she implements inquiry learning into her public school classroom. Rebecca Bathhurst-Hunt and Trevor Mckenzie co-authored a book in 2018 titled Inquiry Mindset, a book designed to help teachers encourage “dreams, wonders, and curiosities in young learners”.
I was unfortunately unable to attend the classroom tour but have been working my way through her website and the multitude of other resources that have been provided by my fellow classmates and Michael, who recorded the audio of her talk and has posted it on our classroom website!
I am so inspired by Rebecca and her implementation of Inquiry based learning into her classroom practice.
On October 11, my ED 336 class went to the Pacific School for Innovation and Inquiry (also known as PSII, pronounced “sigh) to learn about Inquiry based learning.
This school, PSII, is, in my humble and professional opinion, so excellent and effective.
Inquiry is a beautiful process of learning that motivates students, provides an exceptional foundation for future learning, and prepares these young minds for the high-level executive functioning that is required to be successful in this modern world.
The students at this school start their year off by learning how to ask meaningful questions and spend their first week coming up with questions and then narrowing those questions down to topics that interest them and areas they would like to explore. Once this is done, students are provided tools, support, and time to delve deep into their inquiry projects.
Inquiry is unique in that it is a learning style that emphasizes the process of learning, as opposed to the creation of an end result, which is the goal of project based learning or most traditional schooling models. If a students inquiry no longer interests them or they have learned a satisfactory amount they can let an line of inquiry be dropped. This often happens and is seen as part of the inquiry process.
The unique and authentic learning that occurs at PSII is inspiring. I hope that this model becomes more common place in our learning world.
Today in class we learned about video editing and audio recording.
Rich McCue lead this class. He posted instructions and links on how to use a couple different platforms for video editing and audio recording on his blog which can be found here: https://richmccue.com/
We discussed a couple ways that humans have historically used video for learning:
Audio Editing
I recorded a small clip on Audacity, which is a free open-source cross-platform audio software. It, and more information about it, can be accessed on the website https://www.audacityteam.org/
Here is a small sample recording I made in class (the first 5 seconds are silent) :
Video editing
There are a couple options for video editing which are listed below.
Today was the first time I had ever used the program, imovie. I was able to successfully figure out how to make the following video. I used files provided to us by Rich Mccue. The first clip was of chickens in front of a green screen, the second was the fish swimming in the coral reef, and the third file was the audio file of the ocean sounds. I learned how to splice them together and add audio. I found this platform fairly user-friendly and though not intuitive for me I was able to sort through the steps and make it work.
Today in class we talked about:
Tech Inquiry
Trello – Lists, emails, questions for Michael
Open educational resources, content creators and educators, creative commons (licensing tool for sharing material), teachers pay teachers (creating content and trying to sell it to other teachers).
Open Education: creativecommons.org/openeducation concerns: quality, who’s work is being put in this forum – (often teachers not being credited), who puts this together?
copyright – seeking permissions, fair allowances, open source, Copyright Act and Fair Dealing in Canada (Bill C-11).
Think about practice, have a good practice of giving credit to model good practice. Why is it important to copyright? – give credit where credit is due, people want to be acknowledged for their work.
bit.ly links – at bit.ly dot com put in the url so that you can more easily copy and share the link.
© 2025 A Teacher Education Journey
Theme by Anders Noren — Up ↑
Recent Comments