Monday, September 15, 2014

More Assessment Ideas

Here are some more ideas for using document cameras in an assessment role. These ideas come from some of the creative graduate students in my University classes.
"It would be beneficial to record a student's hands moving over a text while reading aloud and document progress over the year. It would also save time because students could record their own reading while I'm working with other students--and I can assess the recordings later."

"For first graders, I would engage the entire class in an assessment as learning activity in which two kids at the visualizer search out long vowel a words in Click, Clack, Moo while the rest of the class follows along. I would give the children glass magnifier beads and show them how to take screen shots to share with others."

Monday, September 1, 2014

What's Missing?

The more I work with teachers in my graduate classes who have document cameras, the more I find that they really want to use document cameras more effectively than they do now. So what's missing here?

Transformative training, that's what!

Although it is certainly true that teachers rarely take advantage of some of the best and most powerful instructional features of these tools, the real key is using these powerful tools differently--doing new things--not just automating old practices. My national workshop "Powerful Visual Teaching and Learning with the Classroom Document Camera" is an example of what is desperately
needed. What matters is using richly visual teaching strategies, transformative student-involvement strategies, and fresh ideas. Those are the pillars of my workshop. If your school, organization, or company is interesting in leveraging these strategies and insights, please contact me. I am available to travel and present in your community, if interested.