Archive for the ‘Tanya Roscorla’ category

Google Custom Search Refines Research Skills

August 26th, 2009

By Tanya Roscorla, originally posted at Converge Online

If you type in “king snake” to Google’s regular search engine, you’ll find about 12.4 million hits, and not all of them focus on the reptile. That’s a problem for educators who want to teach their students how to research online, but they’re addressing it by creating Google custom search engines.

Last year, Darcy Sanderson set up a wiki on animals for the science teachers at J.T. Henley Middle School in Virginia. She came up with a list of five to seven good animal Web pages for the engine so that the kids could hone in on reliable sites that gave them the information they needed, said Sanderson, who worked as a curriculum and technology integration partner as well as an algebra teacher at the time.

“I think it helped them in the long run,” Sanderson said, “and if we hadn’t done that, I think the searching would have been a much more tedious and a longer process.”

The animal custom search engine allowed kids to research on quality sites without spending six hours learning how to evaluate them, which thrilled parents such as Melissa Techman, whose daughter used it in her class.

“Once you explain to teachers and parents what it is, they love it, because it’s almost like training wheels for researchers,” Techman said. “They’re getting the good research experience, but they’re not spending a lot of time looking for sources.”

As the technology lead teacher and librarian for Broadus Wood Elementary School, Techman wants to create a fifth-grade tech squad this year that will work with her on lunch breaks a few times a week to build custom searches that they can share with their classes.

At Chocowinity Primary School in North Carolina, fourth-grade teacher Kelly Hines plans to set up a custom search engine this year so that her students won’t get bogged down by Web sites that are too advanced in vocabulary and context.

“When we study magnetism and electricity or animal habitats, we’ll be able to kind of just narrow the focus of what they are researching and make the Internet a more manageable place for them to navigate,” Hines said.

Search engines create safe, quality learning experiences

Custom searches help students become better researchers, and they act as a scaffold to weed out some of the irrelevant and inappropriate information, said Lucy Gray, a technology integration specialist at the Center for Elementary Math and Science Education at the University of Chicago.

“There’s a mentality around effective searching that has to be taught kindergarten through 12th grade,” Gray said. “It’s not something that you just do one lesson on and then everybody’s good on search. There’s a lot of critical thinking that goes into being an effective searcher.”

She has made more than 20 engines and has learned to maximize the power of the search engines as a Google Certified Teacher. For example, instead of finding all the sites for the engine herself, she can invite other contributors. When she finds a site that she likes, she can add it to some of her search engines by clicking on Google Marker from her toolbar.

Creating a search engine doesn’t take a lot of time, and it’s more effective than searching the whole Web, said Obe Hostetter, an instructional technology resource teacher at Rockingham County Public Schools in Virginia.

“This is actually better than putting things in a bookmarking Web site because then it’s searchable,” Hostetter said, “and you don’t have to remember the tag or the word or which category you put it under.”

Thousands of teachers throughout Virginia use one of Hostetter’s custom search engines to find lessons related to state standards. They can type in topics and even specify what kind of file they want. The one thing that’s missing from Google is a customized image search engine to keep inappropriate images out, he said.

But the search engines do keep students from finding inappropriate sites on the whole Web, said Cindy Lane, an adjunct professor, Google Certified Teacher and instructional technology specialist from St. Louis. One of her students looked up “black holes” in a regular search, and you can just imagine what that child found, she said.

She taught a four-week class this summer at Southwest Baptist University for K-12 educators on Google applications, and she focused on searching during one of those weeks. All of the students created custom search engines, but many of them said they had never heard about it before.

“You would think teachers would know about all of the applications that make their lives easier in their classrooms, but unless they take classes or they go to technology conferences or they have some really good PD [professional development] already imbedded in their schools, it’s a hit and miss kind of thing,” Lane said, “which is unfortunate.”

Check out these resources:
Create a Custom Search Engine (from Google)
Google Teacher Academy Resources (from Google)
Guide to Create Google Custom Search Engine (Word document from Rockingham County Public Schools)
Google Web Search – Classroom Lessons and Resources (from Google)
Create Your Own Student-Friendly Search Engine with Google
(from the blog EdTech Gold Rush)

Google Custom Searches
Math Search
Science Search
Sites for Teachers

K12 Schools Search Engine
Sheridan School Research Sites

Featured examples: Google Picks

Mrs. Gray’s Research Sites for Kids
The Best of Educational Technology
Four Engines used by Virginia teachers
Mrs. Reilly’s Web sites for “A Long Way from Chicago”

Race to the Top Jumpstarts Education Debate

August 12th, 2009

By Tanya Roscorla, originally posted at Converge Online

kids laptop learningThe green flag has dropped. The competition has begun. But it’s not just any jaunt around the track. States are vying for $4.35 billion in federal education grants, and many of them are serious about winning.

If they want to earn the prize, they have to transform education for the better, said Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who announced the start of the Race to the Top on July 24. States have to ratchet up student standards and assessments; find and reward quality educators; install student data systems; and turn around low-performing schools.

But the results may vary depending on how states change their school systems and how much they focus on these four specific areas. And that has educators and education activists questioning what impact the race will have.

“It’s really easy to sit up there at the top and really narrow the focus on what you want to try to accomplish with something like Race to the Top money,” said Pam Moran, the superintendent of Albemarle County Public Schools in Virginia, “and I’m not sure that you’re going to get the kind of entrepreneurial risk taking out there on the table if you get too narrow a definition of what you want to accomplish.”

Duncan has already told states that they will start the contest handicapped if they limit the number of charter schools within their borders. They also might not compete well if they don’t adapt national English and math curriculum standards or link student performance data to teachers.

Failing to address these areas could knock states out of the competition even if they are innovating in other areas.

“They might lose some opportunities for some states to compete that could potentially have the next best educational invention that’s out there,” Moran said, “and I would hate to see that happen.”

Duncan and President Barack Obama have set a sweeping agenda to transform public education, and that’s a good thing, said Jeanne Allen, the president of the Center for Education Reform. They’ve lifted up some states for their progress and have singled out states that show no signs of changing their old, comfortable ways.

“Education reform, however, is neither comfortable nor a race,” Allen said. “It must be achievement-focused and come from a true desire to see America’s children succeed on a global scale. Reform that is bought can easily be voted away once the federal coffers run dry.”

Teaching content through skills

Because states are racing to win the prize, they might cause the nation to move quickly toward national standards and tests without allowing enough room or time for debate, said Chad Sansing, who teaches humanities at a charter school in Virginia and blogs about transforming classroom practice at classroots.org. If the nation leaves out debate, education will be too much like the status quo, and teaching will emphasize learning content by rote.

Race to the Top has given the country an opportunity to change the way it assesses kids, he said, and that should involve providing authentic learning experiences and engagement that’s relevant in the real world.

“We don’t have to have a race for students to master content and leave out skills,” Sansing said. “We don’t have to have students master skills and forget about content. We can bring the two together, but we have to do it in a way that students are mastering content through the skills; that’s possible. It’s not going to be possible for students to master the skills just through the content.”

Several tests are mixing content with skills, including the National Assessment of Educational Progress and the College and Work Readiness Assessment. Schools are jumping on board in their classroom instruction as well, including those started by the nonprofit group Expeditionary Learning Schools Outward Bound and Quest High School in Humble, Texas.

Personalization, not standardization

In addition to assessing skills as well as content, tests should measure students differently based on their learning styles, said Deven Black, a middle school social studies teacher in New York City. Not all kids express themselves the same way, so the standard fill in the bubble or write an essay methods don’t accurately show how well they have mastered content.

Tailored tests can be more expensive, but they would allow students to demonstrate what they have learned through art, music or other means, he said.

The assessment system in this country is in place because it’s cheap, efficient and easy to score, and that limits how educators can measure complex thinking and application, said Superintendent Moran, who mentioned that author Tony Wagner captured this idea clearly in his latest book The Global Achievement Gap: Why Even Our Best Schools Don’t Teach the New Survival Skills Our Children Need –– And What We Can do About It.

States need to move away from standardized, narrowly-defined measures of student performance that are calculated almost everywhere by multiple choice testing. Moran said she hopes that someone will figure out an authentic and scalable way to assess students’ skills though technology instead of continuing the “drill and kill” teaching methods that educators use to prepare kids for tests.

Those tests are designed to evaluate whether students meet grade-level standards, but the standards don’t make sense to Rhonda Feder, an education activist in the nonprofit sector and a Pennsylvania mother of three grade-school children. Grade-level standards presume that a normal course of steps exists for a 10-year-old, and that every 10-year-old takes those same steps.

“It’s like saying, ‘Well, you’re 10, you should wear a size 3 shoe,’” Feder said.

Not all 10-year-olds wear size 3 shoes, and not all 10-year-olds learn the same way, which means that policy-makers need to look at real life kids in the classroom when they’re deciding what they should learn.

They should respect the individuality of children and shouldn’t be afraid to offer different options to different kids, Feder said, adding that if they try to make every class of fifth-graders look the same and write standards from far away, they’re bound to cause some children to fail.

Tests increase pressure on teachers

They’re also bound to cause some children to become bored. In Pennsylvania, children take tests that are tied to state standards about every other month so that teachers can adjust their instruction depending on what concepts students aren’t grasping.

kid children teaching teacherWith talk swirling about Duncan giving preference to states that link student assessment data to teacher performance, the teachers are probably going to focus on making sure that everybody passes the tests and spend less time on those who have already met the standards, Feder said. That’s what happened to one of her children.

He tested proficient after the first few weeks of school, yet had to keep doing worksheets on content he had already mastered, which meant that he spent a lot of time sitting and waiting for everyone else to finish.

Rather than asking whether all sixth-graders meet the standard, educators should look at where they started the year and where they ended. If they focus on the bar, they tend to focus only on students who fall below it. The quality of instruction doesn’t necessarily go down, but it drops to a different level for the students who need it, which doesn’t reach those who have already passed the bar.

A great education depends on great teachers, but any system that places a high percentage of weight on one element of the system is not realistic, Feder said. Teachers, parents and students all have to work together to succeed.

“My child can’t fail without my consent,” she said. “If my kid is failing repeatedly year after year, and I’m just going along for the ride, I’m just as responsible as that school district or that school system or those teachers.”

If the only measure that the government uses to assess teachers is standardized test data, it’s missing the point, Feder said. Race to the Top puts much of the burden on teachers, but it’s not the teachers alone who will help children succeed.

What happens in individual classrooms may be problematic, but teachers as a group are not the problem; they’re just the easy part, said Black, the New York City teacher. High-stakes assessments aren’t scored fast enough for teachers to adjust their teaching, and the scores don’t tell them a heck of a lot.

“The whole way that these major assessments are done just seems to be finding fault with somebody rather than trying to improve anything,” Black said, “and teachers more and more are feeling that they’re the ones that people want to find fault with, as if we were the root of the problem.”

Transforming education

One of the best things that the country can do is to encourage educators from the bottom up to take entrepreneurial risks that will help them re-imagine and reinvent themselves, Superintendent Moran said. And that extends to the kids in the classroom as well. When she walks through the halls of schools, she wants to see kids who are engaged in challenging work that pushes them to become more analytical and creative.

Teachers also need more freedom to be creative and experiment with different ways to engage students, Black said. Any one model is not going to serve the vast majority of people in it, so teachers and schools should have to differentiate instruction.

Coming up with different ways to teach students plays to teachers’ strengths, which policy-makers should take advantage of, Feder said. Figuring out how to fix problems is much harder than identifying them, but it has to be done.

“I don’t think there is one solution. I think the solution is you have to be open to doing what works, and that’s not going to look the same,” she said. “That’s messy, and from year to year you’re going to get it wrong.”

Postscript: States can start applying for Race to the Top funds in the fall, and the first round of prizes will go out in early 2010. Duncan has posted the proposed requirements and selection criteria online so that the public can comment on them before Aug. 28, which means that the race has started, but the rules could change.



Photo credits: woodleywonderworks’ flickr photostream, One Laptop per Child’s flickr photostream / CC BY 2.0

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