
Friday, December 28, 2012
4th Grade Update- December in Review

Thursday, November 29, 2012
6th Grade Update- November in Review

Tags:
6th grade,
history,
Jeopardy,
LS,
PowerPoint
4th Grade Update- November in Review

5th Grade Update- November in Review

Friday, November 16, 2012
5th Grade Internet Safety- Search Shark

Tags:
5th Grade,
CommonSense_Media,
Internet Safety,
LS,
online_search,
parents,
resources
5th Grade Internet Safety- Privacy

Tags:
5th Grade,
CommonSense_Media,
Internet Safety,
LS,
parents,
privacy,
resources
Saturday, November 10, 2012
5th Grade Update- October in Review

Tags:
5th Grade,
explorers,
LS,
PowerPoint,
social studies
Friday, November 2, 2012
4th Grade Update- October in Review

Wednesday, October 31, 2012
6th Grade- "If You Really Knew Me..." Project Update

Tags:
6th grade,
language arts,
LS,
programming,
Scratch
Fablevision's North Star App

Tags:
app,
FableVision,
iPad,
LS,
multiple_intelligences
5th Grade Digital Passport Parent Materials

The digital passport site has the following resources available for parents:
Communication: Twalkers (proper cell phone use, multitasking, and distraction)
Cyberbullying: Evolve (cyberbullying, targets, upstanders, bystanders, and bullies)
Creative Credit: Mix-N-Mash (copyright law, plagiarism, and giving credit)
Thursday, October 25, 2012
New CommonSense Media app

Monday, October 22, 2012
6th Grade- "If you Really Knew Me..." Project

Tags:
6th grade,
language arts,
LS,
programming,
Scratch
5th Grade Internet Safety

Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Is Your Child Interested in Programming?

Saturday, October 6, 2012
Video as a medium of expression
Video is an engaging medium which can tell a story, illustrate a concept, or enrich instruction. Videos can be included in class websites or as evidence of learning. Here are some examples of teachers and students experimenting with the use of video at BB&N...
As a celebration of Spanish language, and leading up to the Hispanic Heritage Dinner, Upper School teacher Profesora Sánchez-Gómez created a video asking students and faculty members of Hispanic origin about their favorite Spanish word.
Here is an example of a video some students threw together in advance of homecoming...
As a celebration of Spanish language, and leading up to the Hispanic Heritage Dinner, Upper School teacher Profesora Sánchez-Gómez created a video asking students and faculty members of Hispanic origin about their favorite Spanish word.
Here is an example of a video some students threw together in advance of homecoming...
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Panelists discussed the pros and cons of technology in education, and an important take-away for parents was to stay connected with their teens and keep the dialog open. Gardner pointed out that one of the benefits of technology is the ability to individualize education, yet he acknowledged that one of the pitfalls is the assumption that everything can and should be "technologized." A theme that emerged through the panels was the desire for a balance between face-to-face and online communication. Gardner referenced a study in which students rated face-to-face interaction as their preferred form of communication, reserved for close friends. Texting, which they claimed to use for organizing their lives, came next, with FaceBook surprisingly lower in the ranks.
Towards the end of the evening, when addressing the topic of social change, Gardner also commented, "You'd be nuts not to use social media, but you'd be nuts to think digital media itself can make the change."
-Jen Lavenberg and Megan Haddadi
-Jen Lavenberg and Megan Haddadi
6th Grade Scratch in the Classroom

Tags:
6th grade,
language arts,
LS,
programming,
Scratch
4th Grade- Tech RUP
Fourth graders are currently discussing BB&N's Technology Responsible Use Policy (p. 17 of the handbook) and my computer lab rules while they continue their touch-typing homework assignments.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
5th Grade Update- September in Review
5th graders started their year in technology organizing their network folders on our school server for storing electronic schoolwork such as PowerPoint presentations and Word documents as well as getting acquainted with their brand new BB&N GMail accounts. Their first technology project of the year, PowerPoint presentations on explorers, will be a coordinated effort between the homeroom teachers, Heather Lee the librarian, and myself, Megan Haddadi the technology teacher. Over the last week or so, students have started learning about PowerPoint by creating a presentation about themselves.
Please ask your child to tell you about SmartMoves, a "body puzzles for the mind" program I am trying out with all of my students this year for transitioning into the classroom and improving focus. "SmartMoves is an award-winning cognitive fitness program that combines music and movement to transform the classroom and change the way students learn." (http://shop. fablevisionlearning.com/ smartmoves/learnmore/overview/ fa/shop.detail/productid/2564/ )
Friday, September 28, 2012
6th Grade Update- September in Review

Please ask your child to tell you about SmartMoves, a "body puzzles for the mind" program I am trying out with the students this year for transitioning into the classroom and improving focus. "SmartMoves is an award-winning cognitive fitness program that combines music and movement to transform the classroom and change the way students learn." (http://shop. fablevisionlearning.com/ smartmoves/learnmore/overview/ fa/shop.detail/productid/2564/ )
Tags:
6th grade,
blogger,
GMail,
language arts,
LS,
SmartBoard
4th Grade Update- September in Review

Please ask your child to tell you about SmartMoves, a "body puzzles for the mind" program I am trying out with my students this year for transitioning into the classroom and improving focus. "SmartMoves is an award-winning cognitive fitness program that combines music and movement to transform the classroom and change the way students learn." (http://shop. fablevisionlearning.com/ smartmoves/learnmore/overview/ fa/shop.detail/productid/2564/ )
Monday, June 11, 2012
5th Grade Math Students Pilot "The Lure of the Labyrinth"
This year, fifth graders in my math group piloted "The Lure of the Labyrinth," an interactive website at http://labyrinth.thinkport.org/www/. The site is designed to provide practice with essential math skills for students in the middle grades. The premise of the game is simple: after students have created a cartoon character for themselves, complete with monster costume and pet, they are informed, through a sequence of comic strips, that their pet has just been kidnapped by monsters. Their mission is to rescue their pet -- by traversing a labyrinth of rooms, each of which contains a puzzle centered around a particular math skill. One unique characteristic of the site is that the instructor, in the process of creating an account, sets up an educator account, which gives them access to data revealing how much each student has played, which puzzles they have mastered, and how far they have advanced into the Labyrinth. It is therefore possible to monitor, assign, and assess learning through the website.

Perhaps the greatest strength of the game, however, is that the practice, though it targets important fourth and fifth grade math skills, is not drill-based. Each puzzle presents an interesting problem that requires creative thinking to solve. For example, students use the notion of common multiples to select portions for monsters' lunch trays in the cafeteria, or solve algebraic equations in many variables as they pore over hieroglyphs in an underground cave. So, while they are never asked, "What is the least common multiple of 25 and 5?", they have a rich experience that leaves them with a greater depth of understanding of that question's underlying meaning. The result is a meaningful exploration of central skills... that's a lot more fun than worksheets!
-Ellie Cowen
5th and 6th Grade Math
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Peer-to-Peer Networking

Thursday, May 24, 2012
KNBC revamped MS Clubs and Organization webpage
KNBC, Knights Broadcasting Club, a student media club, meets weekly during the school day. Projects from the 2010-2011 school year included Cambridge's contribution to the collaborative documentary project, Mapping Main Street (http://www.mappingmainstreet.org/) and an exploration of new media including Meez, Flipbook, iMovie, ComicLife, GarageBand, iPhoto; in the second half of the year, students put their skills into practice as they developed and ran several seminars on BBN Arts Day in March and produced a variety of short films for the final assembly in June.
In addition to building on these initiatives, members of KNBC 2011-2012 worked on a few longer term projects including photoshop and original short animated films. KNBC meets during study hall on Tuesdays, with the occasional off-campus field trip to locations such as the WGBH studios, Museum of Science and the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA).
KNBC's latest project was revamping the Middle School Cubs and Organization page. Students worked in groups using a variety of media to create content for KNBC, Chorus, Science, Community Service, The Spark, Jazz Band, Affinity Lunch, Chamber, D-Squared, Literary Group and BB&N Players. In addition they created this fun video to capture their work.
Enjoy!
In addition to building on these initiatives, members of KNBC 2011-2012 worked on a few longer term projects including photoshop and original short animated films. KNBC meets during study hall on Tuesdays, with the occasional off-campus field trip to locations such as the WGBH studios, Museum of Science and the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA).
KNBC's latest project was revamping the Middle School Cubs and Organization page. Students worked in groups using a variety of media to create content for KNBC, Chorus, Science, Community Service, The Spark, Jazz Band, Affinity Lunch, Chamber, D-Squared, Literary Group and BB&N Players. In addition they created this fun video to capture their work.
Enjoy!
Tags:
7th grade,
8th grade,
animation,
animations,
art,
center for social media,
comic life,
community,
KNBC,
MFA,
multimedia,
museum,
music
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
US 2012 Launch Grant Recipients Reflecting on Haiku
For me the Haiku platform has been a great choice for all my class websites. It is very user friendly for both me and my students. I am not a lover of textbooks and Haiku allows me to have all my documents, videos, links, and audios organized under one umbrella. It is also great to be able to use the Discussion tab as a blog and the Wikisites for class projects. I also ask students to turn in a lot of his assignments in the Dropbox. As we work on a possible Spanish Department Exchange Program for next year, I can see that having a website for the trip will be very useful. I am now taking an online course about creating your own online class and it uses the Haiku platform as well, so it has been very easy for me to start working on all my assignments and see it from the perspective of a student.
- Dr. Rosario Sánchez Gómez
Haiku was a useful platform for each of my courses as a central (and green) location for readings, syllabi, assignments, and language arts exercises. It was also a terrific tool when school was unexpectedly cancelled, everyone had done a key reading, and we all wanted to keep momentum going with an online discussion before school resumed. (In that event I'd just add a new page named for the reading, post some questions, and let the kids take the discussion from there.)
By far the best aspect of Haiku, though, was the way it allowed students to communicate in my senior writing workshop, True Stories and the Personal Essay. I designed an easily navigable Feedback Forum where every student had his own page. There five student writers each week would post their work for peer review and commentary before the live writing workshop during long block. This kind of at-home connecting made in-person discussions so much more thoughtful and efficient, and it got the students talking exponentially more to each other rather than through me. Haiku also allowed me to post timely polls that were useful to me for course redesign (e.g. What was the most enjoyable reading in this unit?) and to the students for contest submissions (e.g. Which of Carly's six essays would you rate the best?). We even used Haiku for brainstorming. One week the theme of the essay assignment was "pettiness," and the students had fun gearing up for it by consulting a class-constructed Haiku list of "Hateful Things."
I had an equally awesome time revising and augmenting my wiki (http://speechwritingpublicspeaking.wikispaces.com/) for my senior Speechwriting and Public Speaking elective. On that site I have built a master page I covet and often direct the kids to called "Worthwhile Links," with professional examples of contemporary and historic speeches from live political events and arts ceremonies and commencement addresses to standout film clips and TED talks and Ignite presentations I've encountered over the years. I also made a page for each of the nine speech genres assigned (Storytelling Speeches, Call to Action Speeches, Speeches to Inform, Tributes, etc.), and on each genre page I embedded YouTube widgets featuring the seniors delivering that kind of original work live, on a Speech Day we'd held during the weekly long blocks. Using the wiki, peers would revisit the speech (and speakers would self-evaluate) before clicking over to comment on a Haiku Feedback Forum set up much the same way as the True Stories Feedback Forum worked. For the speechwriting elective, though, I ran Haiku polls that tended to follow up on the speech content (e.g. How many of you have cooked with kale since Alicia's speech?). For some reason my Haiku page for the Speechwriting class appears to have vaporized, though, so unless you can help me solve that mystery (?help!), you won't be getting a screenshot of that.
-Allison Kornet
Haiku was a useful platform for each of my courses as a central (and green) location for readings, syllabi, assignments, and language arts exercises. It was also a terrific tool when school was unexpectedly cancelled, everyone had done a key reading, and we all wanted to keep momentum going with an online discussion before school resumed. (In that event I'd just add a new page named for the reading, post some questions, and let the kids take the discussion from there.)
By far the best aspect of Haiku, though, was the way it allowed students to communicate in my senior writing workshop, True Stories and the Personal Essay. I designed an easily navigable Feedback Forum where every student had his own page. There five student writers each week would post their work for peer review and commentary before the live writing workshop during long block. This kind of at-home connecting made in-person discussions so much more thoughtful and efficient, and it got the students talking exponentially more to each other rather than through me. Haiku also allowed me to post timely polls that were useful to me for course redesign (e.g. What was the most enjoyable reading in this unit?) and to the students for contest submissions (e.g. Which of Carly's six essays would you rate the best?). We even used Haiku for brainstorming. One week the theme of the essay assignment was "pettiness," and the students had fun gearing up for it by consulting a class-constructed Haiku list of "Hateful Things."
I had an equally awesome time revising and augmenting my wiki (http://speechwritingpublicspeaking.wikispaces.com/) for my senior Speechwriting and Public Speaking elective. On that site I have built a master page I covet and often direct the kids to called "Worthwhile Links," with professional examples of contemporary and historic speeches from live political events and arts ceremonies and commencement addresses to standout film clips and TED talks and Ignite presentations I've encountered over the years. I also made a page for each of the nine speech genres assigned (Storytelling Speeches, Call to Action Speeches, Speeches to Inform, Tributes, etc.), and on each genre page I embedded YouTube widgets featuring the seniors delivering that kind of original work live, on a Speech Day we'd held during the weekly long blocks. Using the wiki, peers would revisit the speech (and speakers would self-evaluate) before clicking over to comment on a Haiku Feedback Forum set up much the same way as the True Stories Feedback Forum worked. For the speechwriting elective, though, I ran Haiku polls that tended to follow up on the speech content (e.g. How many of you have cooked with kale since Alicia's speech?). For some reason my Haiku page for the Speechwriting class appears to have vaporized, though, so unless you can help me solve that mystery (?help!), you won't be getting a screenshot of that.
-Allison Kornet
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
MEMSET at BB&N
Next Wednesday, May 9th, at 5pm, BB&N will host the next MEMSET meeting. MEMSET is a group of Massachusetts Elementary and Middle School Educational Technologists who meet every couple of months to discuss technology in schools.
If you are free and would like to join in our discussion, please contact your campus ATS to let them know that you would like to attend the event. In addition, you are more than welcome to join us when we meet at other schools in our area.
At this month's meeting we will discuss curriculum and benchmarks, such as the ISTE NETS and the Massachusetts standards. After dinner several teachers will present on a variety of topics including the BeeBot, LEGO WeDO and Scratch, SAM animation, iPad apps in science and art, Internet Safety, a science "electric quilt" using e-textiles, voicethread, Museumbox, and bitstrips.
If you are free and would like to join in our discussion, please contact your campus ATS to let them know that you would like to attend the event. In addition, you are more than welcome to join us when we meet at other schools in our area.
At this month's meeting we will discuss curriculum and benchmarks, such as the ISTE NETS and the Massachusetts standards. After dinner several teachers will present on a variety of topics including the BeeBot, LEGO WeDO and Scratch, SAM animation, iPad apps in science and art, Internet Safety, a science "electric quilt" using e-textiles, voicethread, Museumbox, and bitstrips.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
New Tech Help Request System

The BB&N tech department is pleased to unveil our new help request system this week. It is a system which puts each tech request into a database that allows us to have better accountability, communication, and history of all the requests that we handle. The beauty of it from the customer's point of view [this means you] is that all you need to do is send us an email at "tech help" or help@bbns.org and it will flow right into the system and create a new "ticket" for us to address. Any email responses to a particular ticket will get added to its history in the database. When we add a note to a ticket, you will get an automatic email with the info. On the back-end of the database we triage the requests, set priority levels, and get reminded if a ticket lingers too long without action. You can see the history and status of all your tickets by logging into the system at https://helpdesk.bbns.org when you are at school. This is the new system that is replacing the FirstClass technology conferences.
Monday, April 2, 2012
6th Grade Glogster and QR Code project
Glogster is a tool that allows your students to make interactive online posters by mixing images, text, music and video.
This year the 6th grade French and Spanish students are using Glogster to complete their MFA ACTion (Arts, Culture, and Technology) projects. All students visit the MFA, and in art class they choose a painter and a painting for a master study. In French and Spanish classes the students research their painters and paintings to create interactive online posters. Using Glogster, students are able to embed video clips and insert images of their artists and their paintings as well as audio clips of music from the artists' time periods. Lastly, students can use Glogster to record their own voices in their target languages. Each glog results its own unique URL. During technology class, students will turn their URLs into QR codes, and on Sunday, May 13th, the student paintings will be hung on the MFA walls along with the QR codes linking the students' physical artwork to their interactive glogster posters, accessible online via iPads and smartphones.

Below are a few examples of student projects:
If you are interested in learning more about Glogster in the classroom, check out Glogopedia to see sample projects to get ideas on how Glogster could be useful to your students.
For more information on QR codes in the classroom, please see:
Tags:
6th grade,
art,
audio,
bbnClassroom,
french,
glogster,
LS,
MFA,
multimedia,
music,
QRcodes,
spanish,
video,
world languages
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)