We are now thinking of other ways to help others. We would like to hear about what you see outside your school and how you are finding ways to help others.
Friday, 24 October 2014
First book for sharing- We Can See Construction
Our community is changing again. Here is a video of what we can see on the edge of our schoolyard. One way we have helped this year is by raising money for the Terry Fox Run. Our class participated in the run and raised money for the Terry Fox Foundation . We have also learned how to be bucket fillers. We are trying to help others in our classroom and on the yard by saying kind things to each other.
We are now thinking of other ways to help others. We would like to hear about what you see outside your school and how you are finding ways to help others.
We are now thinking of other ways to help others. We would like to hear about what you see outside your school and how you are finding ways to help others.
Sunday, 14 September 2014
Time To Get Started!
I have created a Google Doc. The names are of those who have indicated in the comment section of the first blog post that they are interested in joining in with the project. Please check the list and add/edit as necessary. If you are not on the list, you are still welcome to join in by either adding your name to the list, commenting or tweeting a member.
I am going out to take photos with my students this week. It is my hope to have a project posted in the next few weeks. We will need to think of ways to share the projects. We can post YouTube links, blog links or share via Dropbox. We honor your starting points and will help you find a way that works for your learning style.
Please keep in mind the confidentially of students. I have found it best to take photos without children's faces as well as keeping identifying street names and school names out of photos. Always check with your school and ensure you are following your digital policies.
Google Doc list https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PexzaTpsl4DWS20njn7gcSqzNtLzrJ3ghtqsEFxdGwI/edit?usp=sharing
On behalf of Jocelyn and Heidi, we look forward to learning with you and your classes.
Angie Harrison
@Techieang
I am going out to take photos with my students this week. It is my hope to have a project posted in the next few weeks. We will need to think of ways to share the projects. We can post YouTube links, blog links or share via Dropbox. We honor your starting points and will help you find a way that works for your learning style.
Please keep in mind the confidentially of students. I have found it best to take photos without children's faces as well as keeping identifying street names and school names out of photos. Always check with your school and ensure you are following your digital policies.
Google Doc list https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PexzaTpsl4DWS20njn7gcSqzNtLzrJ3ghtqsEFxdGwI/edit?usp=sharing
On behalf of Jocelyn and Heidi, we look forward to learning with you and your classes.
Angie Harrison
@Techieang
Thursday, 12 June 2014
An invitation to play
What can you see? How can you help?
Last year, some teachers in our PLN engaged in a project
titled What Can You See? Classes took photos of what they could see outside
their windows and created a way to share their view. iBooks, Quicktime movies,
Comics and blog posts displayed the things students could see within their
schoolyard. Classes compared the photos and discussed the similarities. Over
the course of the year, some classes engaged in SKYPE calls to further their
questions and comparisons of schoolyards. As the seasons changed, students
learned about the differences in a schoolyard in Ontario verses schoolyards in
Mexico, Hawaii and other location. It was a rewarding project for both teachers
and students. Teachers tweeted and blogged and students talked and shared their
comparisons. Some of the interactions are posted on the We Can See Blog at http://wecanseeprojectsharingspace.blogspot.ca/
A reflection discussion occurred with Jocelyn Schmidt, Heidi
Theis, Carmela Sita and myself, Angie Harrison. We reviewed how the project
went and noted the benefits for our learners. We want to engage in the project
again with our new group of students in the Fall. However, we feel a need to
take this project one step further. We discussed ways to include a social
justice lens that is appropriate for young learners.
Here is our Invitation to play for 2014-2015
Join us in a
collaborative project that will engage your students and make a difference.
Details: At
different points throughout the year, ask your students to create something
that will show others what they see in their schoolyard. Use a format that
works for your learners. eBooks, Quicktime Movies, Comics, picture books, audio
files or any other method that is easily shared virtually.
Next, with your learners think of a way they can help. It
can be as simple as helping people in your school or community. It might be
participating in a food drive, helping in a seniors’ home or your class might
be a part of a global project. One suggestion, your class could write picture
books for your local Children’s Hospital. Your class might find an
environmental issue to support or your class might respond to a crisis that is
happening in your community or in the world.
A blog will be used to share what you see and ways you are
helping. If you wish, you can connect with classes and SKYPE and talk about how
you are helping others.
Classes could participate in this project once, or several
times throughout the year. They could show progress of one way they are helping
or they might show different ways they help throughout the year.
Our hope is this project will help students understand that
we can all make a difference in the world. (no matter how old we are or where
we live)
Here are some resources that might help launch the project.
Resources:
If Everybody Did by Jo Ann Stover
How Full is Your Bucket? For Kids by Tom Rath and Mary
Reckmeyer
Ordinary Mary’s Extraordinary Deed by Emily Pearson
Those Shoes by Maribeth Boelts
Lily and the Paper Man by Rebecca Upjohn
Lots of other picture
books and lessons listed at http://www.arteducators.org/news/national-convention/Sarah_Ryder_Using_Children%E2%80%99s_Literature_to_Teach_Ideas_of_Social_Justice.pdf
Resources for
helping:
Next Step:
Indicate on the blog that you are interested in
participating. Use the blog post links to your class’ view of the schoolyard.
Tweet using the hashtag #WCYseehelp
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