Thursday, May 5, 2011

Academic honesty

Academic honesty is such a vague issue. There is no sure fire way to keep students honest about their work. I guess I would just tell my students that I expect them to do there own work when its convenient, but I would understand if they borrow ideas from other students or sources. I mean kids today have such high expectations on them that I think the most important thing is just getting the work done and not necessarily the integrity of their work. That is a lesson that is best learned the hard way. If I always preached and demanded for honesty in everything they did I would just be building a wall of frustration between my students and myself and my classroom would be full of friction and not fun. And if it's not fun no learning will take place.





Just Kidding!

Digital citizenship for teachers

Here is the prezi Jeff and I made for digital citizenship

Digital citizenship for students

Digitital citizenship is basically just online etiquette. It's extremely important for students now a days because there is so much technology used in school. Most students don't even have social etiquette and its even more important to have digital etiquette because online interactions and social networking sites are much less personal and therefore its easier to say inappropriate things. Students interact more on the internet today than they do face to face and its causing kids to have less and less censorship because they can hide behind a computer screen.

Internet site validity

It is important to use valid internet sites because if you don't, you don't know if the information is correct or not.

Here are some humorous bogus sites that I found

http://www.genochoice.com/

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Fair Use and Copyright

Fair Use and Copyright refers to the proper use and distribution of all copyright protected material. Copyright was created with good intentions, so that people wouldn't steal other peoples ideas, which is great except I think it has gone a little too far. First of all, I would argue that out of all of the things that get copyrighted, I would say only half of them are original. Second, there are so many copyright laws now its almost impossible to know and keep up with all of them. Although I know I need to be aware of them in the classroom, I'm not trying to steal anyone's ideas. I'm trying to educate children without having to personally generate all the material I use to teach. I would have no problem referencing the things I use. I'm not trying to steal or take copyrighted material. I'm merely borrowing it.

Philosophy of Education

If we assume for a second that the traditional philosophy of education is where a student does an assignment, gets a grade, does another assignment gets another grade, has a test, gets a grade and so on and so on until the end of the semester where their final grade is determined by combining all these grades together. My philosophy of education is similar to learning how to drive. Ideally when you learn to drive you start out practicing with a parent in a parking lot or somewhere away from town, then you get a learners permit where you are allowed to drive with a parent wherever, then comes drivers ed, and once you pass drivers ed you are allowed to drive alone to school. Finally, you take a written test when you turn sixteen and if you pass you are able to drive. This is how I think education should work, we shouldn't grade students on their first experience with a subject or concept. They should have practice mastering a concept while we make value judgments of their improvement along the way. If they aren't improving we come along beside and provide more support and if they are, we challenge them more. This philosophy also uses a combination of both authentic and traditional assessment. A students grade is based more on how much they learned than what they know.