« Teaching Persuasion [Graphic] | Main | What Can Schools Learn from Best Buy's Continuing Troubles? »

March 28, 2012

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c721253ef0167645ba6e8970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference More on Using Digital Kits to Structure Student Projects:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Marsha

You know I did this as I worked with students to build a rock cycle model this week. I put everything out on the counter that I thought they might need...hammers, clamps, candles, aluminum foil pans, bricks, sand, salt, hot plate, matches, etc.

A dear friend told it was scaffolding them into the open-ended lab I was pushing them to do. I didn't give them any directions on how-to, just a challenge to make a model of each type of rock + sediments.

Boy did it work. Prompted lots of experimenting and lots of question asking between kids and within groups. Kids asked to expand the materials and I will make note of their innovations to my set of materials.

But doing it in this way really helped push them into thinking about what to do. And then after they were done into being able to express what they learned in the Think-Pair-Tweet debrief we did.

Loved, loved, loved it. I will work on this idea, too. Share what I find out.....I'm thinking it might be a very creative way for them to express what they've learned for a book report. Create a digital kit for the book!!!! in lieu of the report.

Thx again for your thinking. You always make me better than I could be alone!

Bill Ferriter

I love the digital kit as a product for a project idea, Marsha!

You can learn a lot about how much a student knows by the choices that they make, right?

The only hitch is it will probably take a while for kids to create a complete digital kit for a project simply because theyre going to be doing all the searching that you normally would have done.

I think Id probably use that as a task for students who needed enrichment. That would be an easy extension activity that wouldnt take a ton of teacher time to implement and/or structure.

Looking forward to hearing how it goes,
Bill

Nancy Sharoff

Hi Bill,

And I would take what you're doing one step further (I do) and that is to have students contribute to those digital kits (after being checked by you). There's nothing more powerful than a student having their selections included in a digital kit for their peers to use.

I also have 'Digital Bins' which are basically digital versions of the analogue 'text sets'. These include not only videos, images, primary documents, podcasts, newspaper articles, but also an overview sheet as to what students need to do with the artifacts in the bins and a rubric to help guide them in the develop of their final project. I try to include a variety of levels in each of these kits (particularly for the newspaper articles). Again, students help to build the bins by submitting content to be considered for inclusion. Oh, and if you don't have space on your intranet, consider storing your 'bins' on individual flash drives.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

  • Photo

    Bill Ferriter teaches 6th grade language arts in North Carolina, where he was named a Regional Teacher of the Year for 2005-2006.

    ABOUT

About this blog

  • The Teacher Leaders Network is a diverse community of accomplished teachers from across the United States. TLN is supported by the Center for Teaching Quality as part of its mission to cultivate teacher voice around important matters of education policy and teaching practice. The views expressed on this page are those of the individual author or authors and not necessarily the Center for Teaching Quality.